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bristly ricegrass, bristly speargrass

Culms

20-40 cm, prostrate to ascending;

nodes 2, dark, glabrous.

Sheaths

glabrous, smooth;

ligules 0.5-2.5 mm, obtuse, membranous, glabrous;

blades (3)5-12.5 cm long, 0.8-1.5 mm wide, glabrous or hispidulous, margins scabridulous.

Panicles

3-15 cm long, 2-3 cm wide, with (5)10-30 spikelets;

branches appressed to ascending, glabrous or hispid;

pedicels 2-6 mm, hispidulous.

Glumes

subequal, 5-7 mm long, 1-2 mm wide, purplish at the base;

lower glumes (3)5(7)-veined;

upper glumes 5(7)-veined;

florets 2.5-3 mm long, 1.2-1.8 mm thick, globose to slightly laterally compressed, gibbous;

calluses 0.2-0.5 mm, obtuse, antrorsely strigose, hairs whitish to golden;

lemmas glabrous, longitudinally striate, constricted below the crown, chestnut brown at maturity;

crowns 0.5-0.8 mm wide, straight, not strongly differentiated, distal margins papillose;

awns 10-16 mm, once- or twice-geniculate;

paleas to 3.2 mm;

anthers about 0.5 mm.

Caryopses

2-2.5 mm, spherical to ellipsoid.

2n

= unknown.

Piptochaetium fuscum

Distribution
from USDA
[WildflowerSearch map]
Discussion

Piptochaetium setosum is native to central Chile. There is an established population in Marin County, California, that grows intermingled with P. stipoides, another South American species. The two species grow in the middle of a dirt track and in the adjacent meadow. The California plants of P. setosum are notable for their prostrate culms. This characteristic was not mentioned by Parodi (1944) or Cialdella and Arriaga (1998).

The origin of the California population is not known. It has been suggested that the seeds might have been brought in by birds, as the area was a bird refuge at one time.

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

Source FNA vol. 24.
Parent taxa Poaceae > subfam. Pooideae > tribe Stipeae > Piptochaetium
Sibling taxa
P. avenaceum, P. avenacioides, P. fimbriatum, P. pringlei, P. stipoides
Name authority (Trin.) Arechav.
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