Stenotaphrum secundatum |
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Saint Augustine grass, St. Augustine grass |
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Habit | Plants stoloniferous. |
Culms | 10-30 cm, decumbent, rooting at the lower nodes, branched above the base, with prominent prophylls. |
Sheaths | sparsely pilose, constricted at the summit; ligules about 0.5 mm, membranous, ciliate; blades 3-15(18) cm long, 4-10 mm wide, thick, flat, glabrous, apices blunt. |
Panicles | 4.5-10 cm long, less than 1 cm wide; rachises flattened, winged; branches 12-20, with 1-5 spikelets. |
Spikelets | 3.5-5 mm, partially embedded in 1 side of the branch axes; lower glumes about 1 mm, rounded, irregularly toothed; upper glumes and lower lemmas 3-4 mm, about equal; upper lemmas papery, 5-veined, margins weakly clasping the paleas; anthers 2-2.5 mm, tan or purple. |
Caryopses | about 2 mm, oblong to obovate. |
2n | = 18. |
Stenotaphrum secundatum |
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Distribution |
AL; CA; FL; GA; LA; MO; MS; NC; NM; OK; SC; TN; TX; VA; HI; PR; Virgin Islands
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Discussion | Stenotaphrum secundatum grows on sandy beaches, at the edges of swamps and lagoons, and along inland streams and lakes. It may be native to the southeastern United States, being known from the Carolinas prior to 1800, but it has become naturalized in most tropical and subtropical regions of the world. Stenotaphrum secundatum is planted for turf in the southern United States and is now established from California to North Carolina and Florida. Numerous cultivars have been developed. Specimens with variegated foliage (often called S. secundatum var. variegatum Hitchc.) are sometimes used as an ornamental in hanging baskets and greenhouses. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 25, p. 561. |
Parent taxa | Poaceae > subfam. Panicoideae > tribe Paniceae > Stenotaphrum |
Name authority | (Walter) Kuntze |
Web links |