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bottlebrush, bottlebrush squirreltail, long-bristle wildrye, squirrel tail grass, squirreltail, western bottle-brush grass

Habit Plants cespitose, often glaucous, not rhizomatous.
Culms

8-65 (77) cm, erect or geniculate to slightly decumbent, sometimes puberulent;

nodes 4-6, mostly concealed, usually glabrous, sometimes pubescent.

Leaves

evenly distributed;

sheaths glabrous, scabrous, puberulent, or densely white-villous;

auricles usually present, to about 1 mm, often purplish;

ligules shorter than 1 mm, truncate, entire or lacerate;

blades (1)2-4(6) mm wide, spreading or ascending, often involute, sometimes folded, abaxial surfaces glabrous to puberulent, adaxial surfaces scabrous, puberulent, hirsute, or white-villous.

Spikes

3-20 cm long, 5-15 cm wide, erect to sub-flexuous, with 2-3 spikelets per node, rarely with 1 at some nodes;

internodes 3-10(15) mm long, 0.1-0.4 mm thick at the thinnest sections, usually glabrous, sometimes puberulent beneath the spikelets.

Spikelets

10-20 mm, divergent, sometimes glaucous, at least 1 spikelet at a node with 2-4(5) florets, 1-4(5) florets fertile, sometimes all florets sterile in the lateral spikelets;

disarticulation initially at the rachis nodes, subsequently beneath each floret.

Glumes

subequal, 20-135 mm including the often undifferentiated awns, the bases indurate and glabrous, glume bodies 5-10 mm long, 1-3 mm wide, linear to setaceous, 1-3-veined, margins firm, awns 15-125 mm, scabrous, sometimes split into 2-3 unequal divisions, flexuous to outcurving from near the base at maturity;

fertile lemmas 6-12 mm, glabrous, scabrous, or appressed-pubescent, 2 lateral veins extending into bristles to 10 mm, awns 15-120 mm long, about 0.4 mm wide at the base, often reddish or purplish, scabrous, flexuous to curved near the base;

paleas 6-11 mm, veins often extending into bristles to 2(5) mm, apices acute to truncate;

anthers 0.9-2.2 mm.

Anthesis

from late May to July.

2n

= 28.

Elymus elymoides

Distribution
from FNA
AZ; CA; CO; DC; ID; IL; KS; KY; MO; MT; ND; NE; NM; NV; OK; OR; SD; TX; UT; WA; WY; AB; BC; SK
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Elymus elymoides grows in dry, often rocky, open woods, thickets, grasslands, and disturbed areas, from sagebrush deserts to alpine tundra. It is widespread in western North America, from British Columbia to northern Mexico and the western Great Plains, and introduced in western Missouri, Illinois, and Kentucky. It is often dominant in overgrazed pinyon-juniper woodlands. Although palatable early in the season, the disarticulating, long-awned spikes irritate grazing animals later in the year.

Elymus elymoides intergrades with E. multisetus (see previous) in parts of its southern range (Wilson 1963). It is sometimes confused with E. scribneri (p. 330), but differs in having more than one spikelet per node, narrower glumes, and less tardily disarticulating rachises. Hybrids with several other species in the Triticeae are known; they can often be recognized by their tardily disarticulating rachises. Named interspecific hybrids (pp. 338-343) (and the other parent) are E. xsaundersii (E. trachycaulus), E. xpinalenoensis (E. arizonicus), and possibly E. xhansenii (E. elymoides or E. multisetus x E. glaucus). Hybrids with E. sierrae have not been named; they are common where the two species are sympatric. They have broader glume bases, shorter glume awns, and longer anthers than E. elymoides.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Key
1. Rachis nodes with 3 spikelets, the central spikelet usually with 2 fertile florets, the florets of the lateral spikelets rudimentary to awnlike; lemma awns 15-30 mm long
subsp. hordeoides
1. Rachis nodes usually with 2 spikelets, each spikelet usually with (1)2-4(5) fertile florets; lemma awns 15-120 mm long.
→ 2
2. No spikelets appearing to have 3 glumes, the lowermost floret in each spikelet well developed; paleas rarely with the veins extended as bristles
subsp. brevifolius
2. One or more of the spikelets at most nodes appearing to have 3 glumes, the lowest 1-2 florets sterile and glumelike; paleas usually with the veins extended as bristles.
→ 3
3. Glumes with awns 15-70 mm long, all glumes entire
subsp. californicus
3. Glumes with awns 35-85 mm long, one of the glumes at most nodes with the awn split into 2 or 3 divisions
subsp. elymoides
Source FNA vol. 24, p. 318.
Parent taxa Poaceae > subfam. Pooideae > tribe Triticeae > Elymus
Sibling taxa
E. alaskanus, E. albicans, E. arizonicus, E. bakeri, E. canadensis, E. caninus, E. churchii, E. ciliaris, E. curvatus, E. dahuricus, E. diversiglumis, E. glabriflorus, E. glaucus, E. hirsutus, E. hoffmannii, E. hystrix, E. interruptus, E. lanceolatus, E. macgregorii, E. macrourus, E. multisetus, E. pringlei, E. repens, E. riparius, E. scribneri, E. semicostatus, E. sibiricus, E. sierrae, E. stebbinsii, E. svensonii, E. texensis, E. trachycaulus, E. tsukushiensis, E. villosus, E. violaceus, E. virginicus, E. wawawaiensis, E. wiegandii, E. ×cayouetteorum, E. ×ebingeri, E. ×hansenii, E. ×palmerensis, E. ×pinalenoensis, E. ×pseudorepens, E. ×saundersii, E. ×yukonensis
Subordinate taxa
E. elymoides subsp. brevifolius, E. elymoides subsp. californicus, E. elymoides subsp. elymoides, E. elymoides subsp. hordeoides
Synonyms Sitanion hystrix, E. pubiflorus, E. glaber, Sitanion longifolium, Sitanion pubiflorum
Name authority (Raf.) Swezey
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