Melica porteri |
Poaceae tribe Meliceae |
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Porter melic, Porter's melic, Porter's melicgrass |
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Habit | Plants not or loosely cespitose, shortly rhizomatous. | Plants usually perennial, sometimes annual; cespitose, sometimes rhizomatous. | ||||||||||||||||
Culms | 55-100 cm, not forming corms; internodes smooth, basal internodes not thickened. |
annual, not woody, not branching above the base; internodes hollow. |
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Sheaths | often scabrous on the keels, otherwise smooth; ligules 1-7 mm; blades 2-5 mm wide, both surfaces glabrous, scabridulous. |
closed for their whole length or almost so; collars without tufts of hair on the sides; auricles sometimes present; ligules hyaline, glabrous, often lacerate, occasionally ciliate, those of the lower and upper cauline leaves usually similar; pseudopetioles absent; blades linear to narrowly lanceolate, venation parallel, cross venation sometimes evident; cross sections non-Kranz, without arm or fusoid cells; epidermes without microhairs, sometimes papillate. |
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Panicles | 13-25 cm; branches 1-9 cm, straight and appressed or flexible and ascending to strongly divergent, with 1-12 spikelets; pedicels sharply bent below the spikelets; disarticulation below the glumes. |
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Inflorescences | terminal panicles or racemes; disarticulation above the glumes and beneath the florets or below the glumes. |
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Spikelets | 8-16 mm long, 1.5-5 mm wide, parallel-sided when mature, with 2-5 bisexual florets; rachilla internodes 1.9-2.1 mm. |
2.5-60 mm, not viviparous, slightly to strongly laterally compressed, with 1-30 florets, proximal florets bisexual, distal 1-3 florets usually sterile, sometimes pistillate, sometimes reduced and amalgamated into a knob- or club-shaped rudiment; rachillas prolonged beyond the base of the distal floret. |
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Glumes | green, pale, or purplish-tinged; lower glumes 3.5-6 mm long, 2-3 mm wide, 3-5-veined; upper glumes 5-8 mm long, 2-3 mm wide, 5-veined; lemmas 6-10 mm, glabrous, chartaceous on the distal 1/3, 5-11-veined, veins conspicuous, apices rounded to acute, unawned; paleas about 2/3 the length of the lemmas; anthers 1-2.5 mm; rudiments 1.8-5 mm, acute to acuminate, resembling the bisexual florets. |
exceeded by the distal florets, shorter than to longer than the adjacent lemmas, mostly membranous, scarious distally, 1-11-veined, apices usually rounded to acute; florets laterally or dorsally compressed; calluses blunt, glabrous or with hairs; lemmas of sexual florets rectangular or ovate, mostly membranous, scarious distally, often with a purplish band adjacent to the scarious apices, (4)5-15-veined, veins not converging distally, often prominent, unawned or awned, awns not branched, apices entire to bilobed or bifid, awns straight, subterminal or from the sinuses; paleas from shorter than to longer than the lemmas, similar in texture, 2-veined, veins keeled, sometimes winged; lodicules 2, fleshy, usually connate into a single structure, without a membranous wing, truncate, not ciliate, not or scarcely veined; anthers 1, 2, or 3; ovaries glabrous; styles 2-branched, bases persistent, branches plumose distally. |
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Caryopses | ovoid to ellipsoid, longitudinally grooved or not; hila usually linear; embryos less than 1/3 as long as the caryopses. |
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x | = (8)9, 10. |
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2n | = 18. |
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Melica porteri |
Poaceae tribe Meliceae |
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Distribution |
AZ; CO; KS; NM; TX; UT
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Discussion | Melica porteri grows on rocky slopes and in open woods, often near streams. It grows from Colorado and Arizona to central Texas and northern Mexico. Living plants are sometimes confused with Bouteloua curtipendula; the similarity is superficial. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
There are approximately 130 species and 8 or 9 genera in the Meliceae. Four of the genera are monotypic. Melica and Glyceria, the two largest genera, are well represented in North America. Pleuropogon and Schizachne are primarily North American, but extend into eastern Asia. Molecular studies (e.g., Soreng and Davis 2000; Grass Phylogeny Working Group 2001) show the tribe to be monophyletic and somewhat basal within the Pooideae. Members of the tribe are most easily recognized by the combination of closed leaf sheaths, scarious lemma apices, and non-converging lemma veins. The tribe also differs from other tribes in the Pooideae in having 2 unwinged lodicules that are usually connate into a single structure, and a base chromosome number of 9 or 10. Catabrosa and Briza, whose inclusion in the tribe was suggested by the preliminary results of Mejia-Saules and Bisby (2000), have more membranous lemma margins and free, winged lodicules. Briza also has open leaf sheaths and more convergent lemma veins. Their inclusion is not supported by the molecular data. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 24, p. 98. | FNA vol. 24, p. 67. | ||||||||||||||||
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Name authority | Scribn. | Endl. | ||||||||||||||||
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