Images
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Morphology
- Culm
- Base branching, decumbent, spreading; culm ascending or rarely erect, solid, slightly flattened, glabrous, shiny, sometimes glaucous; outer layer easily separates.
- Blades
- Crowded, flat or folded longitudinally, .8 to 4 inches long, /25 to 1/10 inch wide, abruptly expanded above collar, rough, sometimes glaucous; tip tapering to long point.
- Sheath
- Shorter or about as long as internodes, usually overlapping, keeled, smooth.
- Ligule
- Membranous, short, firm, margin jagged.
- Inflorescence
- Panicle, open, much-branched, 2 to 8 inches long, broadly egg-shaped in outline, terminal; base sometimes partly enclosed in leaf sheath; branches widely spreading.
- Spikelets
- Few, scattered at branch ends; stalk 2/5 to 4/5 inch long; 1-2-flowered, 1/20 to 1/12 inch long, often purplish or blackish; glumes nearly equal, lanceolate, thin, half to nearly as long as spikelet; tip often bristle-pointed; lemmas oblong-elliptic, 1/24 to 1/15 inch long. thin, glabrous; tip rounded to bluntly pointed, nearly awnless.
Ecology
- Habitat
- Stream banks, lake margins, ditches, open disturbed sites; moist, sandy, often alkaline soils.
- Distribution
- West 2/3 of Kansas.
Additional Notes
Comments
Scratchgrass is strongly rhizomatous with long, slender rhizomes. It is sometimes infested with a smut fungus which will cause misshapen and blackened seeds.
Quick Facts
- Plant Type
- Grass
- Family
- Poaceae - Grass Family
- Life Span
- Perennial
- Height
- 4-20 inches
- Origin
- Native
- Last Updated
- 2010-12-21
Flowering Period
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Blooms: June, July, August, September, October