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lopside indiangrass

Habit Plants not rhizomatous.
Culms

90-180 cm tall, 1.5-3 mm wide;

internodes glabrous or pubescent beneath the nodes.

Sheaths

usually glabrous, occasionally pubescent in young plants;

ligules 2.5-4(5.7) mm;

blades 20-50 cm long, (1.8)3-6 mm wide, scabrous, particularly on the adaxial surfaces.

Panicles

15-40 cm, straight to slightly arching, secund, somewhat open;

nodes glabrous or almost so;

branches erect or nearly so.

Spikelets

6-8 mm long, 0.8-1.2 mm wide, lanceolate, dark brown to golden brown at maturity.

Caryopses

2-3 mm.

Pedicels

4-7.5 mm, pubescent, sharply curved to recurved.

Calluses

1-1.2 mm, blunt, densely bearded;

lower glumes 6-7.5 mm, pubescent, truncate, 7-9-veined;

upper glumes 6.5-8 mm, glabrous, acuminate, 5-veined;

awns 30-40 mm, 4-5 times longer than the spikelets, twice-geniculate, dark brown;

anthers 2.5-4.5 mm.

2n

= 20.

Sorghastrum secundum

Distribution
from FNA
AL; AR; FL; GA; KS; LA; MS; SC
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Sorghastrum secundum grows in woodlands, sandy soils, and occasionally at the edges of marshes, at elevations below 1000 m. Its native range extends north and west from Florida to the Appalachian Mountains; other records probably reflect introductions. The mountains may have effectively prevented its further spread to the northwest.

Sorghastrum secundum is easily confused with plants of S. elliottii that are not at anthesis, because both species have straight to slightly arching panicles with ascending branches. However, the rachis nodes of S. secundum are glabrous or almost glabrous.

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

Source FNA vol. 25, p. 631.
Parent taxa Poaceae > subfam. Panicoideae > tribe Andropogoneae > Sorghastrum
Sibling taxa
S. elliottii, S. nutans
Name authority (Elliott) Nash
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