The green links below add additional plants to the comparison table. Blue links lead to other Web sites.
enable glossary links

California melic, California melicgrass

Habit Plants densely cespitose, not rhizomatous.
Culms

50-130 cm, not forming corms;

lower nodes strigose;

internodes usually smooth, sometimes puberulent below the nodes, lower 2-3 internodes usually swollen.

Sheaths

glabrous or pilose;

ligules 1.5-4 mm;

blades 1.5-5 mm wide, strigose on both surfaces.

Panicles

4-30 cm;

branches 3-6 cm, appressed, straight, with 4-15 spikelets;

pedicels straight;

disarticulation above the glumes.

Spikelets

5-15 mm, with 2-5 bisexual florets;

rachilla internodes 1.1-1.6 mm.

Lower glumes

3.5-12 mm long, 2.5-3 mm wide, 3-5-veined;

upper glumes 5-13 mm long, 2-2.5 mm wide, 5-7-veined;

lemmas 5-9 mm, glabrous, smooth to scabrous, 7-9-veined, veins inconspicuous, apices rounded to broadly acute, unawned;

paleas about 3/4 the length of the lemmas;

anthers 3, 1.8-3 mm;

rudiments 1.4-3 mm, clublike, not resembling the bisexual florets, truncate to acute.

2n

= 18.

Melica californica

Distribution
from USDA
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Melica californica grows from sea level to 2100 m, in a wide range of habitats, from dry, rocky, exposed hillsides to moist woods. Its range extends from Oregon to California. It differs from M. bulbosa in its more obtuse spikelets and less strongly colored lemmas, as well as in not having corms.

Melica californica var. nevadensis Boyle supposedly differs from var. californica in having shorter spikelets (averaging 8, rather than 10, mm), more acute glumes and lemmas, blunter rudiments, and in being restricted to the lower Sierra Nevada; the two varieties intergrade, both morphologically and geographically.

Boyle (1945) obtained vigorous sterile hybrids from crosses between M. californica and M. imperfecta, but found no natural hybrids.

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

Source FNA vol. 24, p. 93.
Parent taxa Poaceae > subfam. Pooideae > tribe Meliceae > Melica
Sibling taxa
M. altissima, M. aristata, M. bulbosa, M. ciliata, M. frutescens, M. fugax, M. geyeri, M. harfordii, M. imperfecta, M. montezumae, M. mutica, M. nitens, M. porteri, M. smithii, M. spectabilis, M. stricta, M. subulata, M. torreyana
Name authority Scribn.
Web links