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dwarf alkali grass, puccinellie naine, smooth alkali grass, tundra alkali grass

Habit Plants perennial; usually cespitose, occasionally appearing rhizomatous or stoloniferous after rooting at the nodes of buried stems, infrequently stoloniferous, not mat-forming.
Culms

8-40 cm, erect to decumbent.

Panicles

3-20 cm, dense to diffuse at maturity, lower branches ascending to descending, spikelets borne from near the bases or confined to the distal 2/3;

pedicels smooth or with a few scattered scabrules, often with tumid epidermal cells distally.

Spikelets

4-9 mm, with 3-7 florets.

Glumes

rounded over the back, veins obscure to distinct, apices acute to obtuse;

lower glumes 1.4-2(4) mm;

upper glumes 2-3(9) mm;

calluses glabrous or with a few hairs;

lemmas 2.5-4.6 mm, herbaceous, glabrous or with a few hairs on the vein bases, backs rounded, 5-veined, veins obscure, not extending to the margins, apical margins usually smooth, occasionally with a few scattered scabrules, entire, not white, apices acute to obtuse, entire;

palea veins glabrous, smooth or with a few scabrules distally;

anthers 0.5-1.2 mm.

Ligules

0.8-2.5 mm, obtuse to truncate, entire;

blades 1-3 mm wide, flat to involute.

2n

= 14 [for Puccinellia alaskana], 42, 56.

Puccinellia pumila

Distribution
from FNA
AK; CA; MA; OR; WA; BC; MB; NB; NL; NS; NU; ON; PE; QC; Greenland
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Puccinellia pumila is primarily North American, growing on the Pacific, Arctic, and Atlantic coasts. It also grows in Kamchatka, Russia (Tsvelev 1995). It generally grows in sand and among stones in protected intertidal environments. A few specimens with exceptionally long glumes and lemmas were treated by Fernald and Weatherby (1916) as P. paupercula var. longiglumis Fernald & Weath.; they are regarded here as representing extremes of P. pumila.

Puccinellia alaskana Scribn. & Merr., here included in P. pumila, was considered a subspecies of P. langeana (Berlin) T.J. Serensen ex Hulten [= P. tenella] by S0rensen (1953), but more closely resembles P. pumila. It differs morphologically from P. pumila mainly in its relatively distinct lemma veins. It also differs from most specimens of P. pumila in having smaller lemmas (2.5-3 mm) and anthers (0.5-0.9 mm), and in being diploid. It represents the Aleutian Islands component of the geographic distribution given for P. pumila. Its status is currently under investigation. Molecular data obtained as this volume went to press (Consaul et al. [in prep.]) tend to support recognition of P. alaskana as a distinct species.

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

Source FNA vol. 24, p. 471.
Parent taxa Poaceae > subfam. Pooideae > tribe Poeae > Puccinellia
Sibling taxa
P. andersonii, P. angustata, P. arctica, P. bruggemannii, P. distans, P. fasciculata, P. groenlandica, P. howellii, P. lemmonii, P. maritima, P. nutkaensis, P. nuttalliana, P. parishii, P. phryganodes, P. rupestris, P. simplex, P. tenella, P. vaginata, P. vahliana, P. wrightii
Synonyms P. tenella subsp. alaskana, P. paupercula var. alaskana, P. paupercula, P. langeana subsp. alaskana, P. ambigua
Name authority (Vasey) Hitchc.
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