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Letterman bluegrass, Letterman's blue grass

Sierra blue grass

Habit Plants perennial; not glaucous; densely tufted, not stoloniferous, not rhizomatous. Plants perennial; loosely tufted or with solitary shoots, short-rhizomatous.
Culms

1-12 cm, slender.

20-60 cm, slender, erect or the bases decumbent, terete or weakly compressed;

nodes terete, 1-2 exserted.

Sheaths

closed for 1/6 – 1/4 their length, terete;

ligules 1-3 mm, milky white to hyaline, smooth;

blades 0.5-2 mm wide, flat or folded, or slightly inrolled, thin, without papillae (at 100x), apices narrowly prow-shaped.

closed from 9/10 their length to their entire length, terete, smooth or sparsely scabrous, glabrous, bases of basal sheaths glabrous, distal sheath lengths 0.18-0.8 times blade lengths;

collars smooth, glabrous;

ligules 3-6 mm, scabrous, acute to acuminate;

innovation blades similar to the cauline blades;

cauline blades gradually reduced in length distally, 1.5-2.5 mm wide, flat, thin, soft, smooth or sparsely scabrous, primarily over the veins, apices narrowly to broadly prow-shaped, flag leaf blades 8-12 cm.

Basal branching

all or mainly intra-vaginal.

extravaginal, initiated as pinkish to purplish fleshy buds that persist as sets of short scales at the nodes of rhizomes and the proximal culm nodes, drying brownish and flabelliform after the shoots develop.

Panicles

1-3 cm, erect, contracted, usually exserted from the sheaths;

branches to 1.5 cm, erect to steeply ascending, slender, sulcate or angled, smooth or the angles sparsely scabrous;

pedicels shorter than the spikelets.

4-15 cm, erect, ovoid, sparse, with fewer than 15(20) spikelets;

nodes with 1-2 branches;

branches 1-4.5 cm, spreading to reflexed, slender, terete, sparsely to moderately scabrous, with 1-3 spikelets.

Spikelets

3-4 mm, laterally compressed, green or anthocyanic;

florets 2-3;

rachilla internodes shorter than 1 mm, smooth.

5-9 mm, lengths to 3.5 times widths, laterally compressed, not sexually dimorphic;

florets 2-6;

rachilla internodes smooth, sparsely hairy, hairs to 0.3 mm.

Glumes

usually equaling or exceeding the lowest lemmas, sometimes also equaling or exceeding the upper florets, lanceolate to broadly lanceolate, distinctly keeled, keels smooth;

lower glumes 3-veined;

calluses glabrous;

lemmas 2.5-3 mm, lanceolate, distinctly keeled, thin, usually glabrous, keels and marginal veins rarely sparsely puberulent proximally, apices acute;

palea keels scabrous;

anthers 0.2-0.8 mm.

1/3 – 3/4(4/5) as long as the adjacent lemmas, keels sparsely scabrous;

lower glumes 3-veined;

calluses glabrous or webbed, hairs at least 1-2 mm;

lemmas 4-7 mm, lanceolate, distinctly keeled, keels and marginal veins glabrous or short-villous, lateral veins obscure, glabrous, finely scabrous, intercostal regions glabrous or sparsely softly puberulent, margins glabrous, apices acute;

palea keels scabrous, sometimes softly puberulent at midlength;

anthers vestigial (0.1-0.2 mm) or 2-4 mm.

2n

= 14.

= ca. 58.

Poa lettermanii

Poa sierrae

Distribution
from FNA
CA; CO; ID; MT; NV; OR; UT; WA; WY; AB; BC
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
CA
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Poa lettermanii grows on rocky slopes of the highest peaks and ridges in the alpine zone, from northern British Columbia to western Alberta and south to California and Colorado, usually in the shelter of rocks or on mesic to wet, frost-scarred slopes. It is one of only three known diploid Poa species native to the Western Hemisphere. Its glabrous calluses and lemmas usually distinguish it from P. abbreviata (p. 582); it also differs in having flat or folded leaf blades, and shorter spikelets with glumes that are longer than the adjacent florets. Poa montevansii E.H. Kelso is tentatively included here, although its slightly longer lemmas that slightly exceed the glumes suggest that it may represent rare, glabrous forms of P. abbreviata.

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

Poa sierrae, a distinctive dioecious species, is a narrow endemic of mid-elevation canyon slopes on the west side of the Sierra Nevada, California. It can be distinguished from all other Poa species by the scaly, pink to purplish buds on the rhizomes, and by the entirely or almost entirely closed upper culm sheaths that are shorter than their blades.

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

Source FNA vol. 24, p. 580. FNA vol. 24, p. 548.
Parent taxa Poaceae > subfam. Pooideae > tribe Poeae > Poa > subg. Poa > sect. Abbreviatae Poaceae > subfam. Pooideae > tribe Poeae > Poa > subg. Poa > sect. Madropoa > subsect. Poa
Sibling taxa
P. abbreviata, P. alpina, P. alsodes, P. ammophila, P. annua, P. arachnifera, P. arctica, P. arida, P. arnowiae, P. atropurpurea, P. autumnalis, P. bigelovii, P. bolanderi, P. bulbosa, P. chaixii, P. chambersii, P. chapmaniana, P. compressa, P. confinis, P. curtifolia, P. cusickii, P. cuspidata, P. diaboli, P. douglasii, P. eminens, P. fendleriana, P. glauca, P. hartzii, P. howellii, P. infirma, P. interior, P. keckii, P. kelloggii, P. laxa, P. laxa × glauca, P. laxiflora, P. leibergii, P. leptocoma, P. macrantha, P. macrocalyx, P. marcida, P. napensis, P. nemoralis, P. nervosa, P. occidentalis, P. paludigena, P. palustris, P. paucispicula, P. piperi, P. porsildii, P. pratensis, P. pringlei, P. pseudoabbreviata, P. reflexa, P. rhizomata, P. saltuensis, P. secunda, P. sierrae, P. stebbinsii, P. stenantha, P. strictiramea, P. sublanata, P. suksdorfii, P. supina, P. sylvestris, P. tenerrima, P. tracyi, P. trivialis, P. unilateralis, P. wheeleri, P. wolfii, P. ×gaspensis, P. ×limosa, P. ×nematophylla
P. abbreviata, P. alpina, P. alsodes, P. ammophila, P. annua, P. arachnifera, P. arctica, P. arida, P. arnowiae, P. atropurpurea, P. autumnalis, P. bigelovii, P. bolanderi, P. bulbosa, P. chaixii, P. chambersii, P. chapmaniana, P. compressa, P. confinis, P. curtifolia, P. cusickii, P. cuspidata, P. diaboli, P. douglasii, P. eminens, P. fendleriana, P. glauca, P. hartzii, P. howellii, P. infirma, P. interior, P. keckii, P. kelloggii, P. laxa, P. laxa × glauca, P. laxiflora, P. leibergii, P. leptocoma, P. lettermanii, P. macrantha, P. macrocalyx, P. marcida, P. napensis, P. nemoralis, P. nervosa, P. occidentalis, P. paludigena, P. palustris, P. paucispicula, P. piperi, P. porsildii, P. pratensis, P. pringlei, P. pseudoabbreviata, P. reflexa, P. rhizomata, P. saltuensis, P. secunda, P. stebbinsii, P. stenantha, P. strictiramea, P. sublanata, P. suksdorfii, P. supina, P. sylvestris, P. tenerrima, P. tracyi, P. trivialis, P. unilateralis, P. wheeleri, P. wolfii, P. ×gaspensis, P. ×limosa, P. ×nematophylla
Synonyms P. mor.tevansi
Name authority Vasey J.T. Howell
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