TREATMENT FROM THE JEPSON MANUAL (1993) |
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©Copyright 1993 by the Regents of the University of California
For up-to-date information about California vascular plants, visit the Jepson eFlora. |
AND IS MAINTAINED FOR ARCHIVAL PURPOSES ONLY |
Annual to bamboo-like; roots generally fibrous
Stem generally round, hollow; nodes swollen, solid
Leaves alternate, 2-ranked, generally linear; sheath generally open; ligule membranous or hairy, at blade base
Inflorescence various (of generally many spikelets)
Spikelet: glumes generally 2; florets (lemma, palea, flower) 1many; lemma generally membranous, sometimes glume-like; palea generally ± transparent, ± enclosed by lemma
Flower generally bisexual, minute; stamens generally 3; stigmas generally 2, generally plumose
Fruit: achene-like grain
Genera in family: 650900 genera; ± 10,000 species: worldwide; greatest economic importance of any family (wheat, rice, maize, millet, sorghum, sugar cane, forage crops, ornamental, weeds; thatching, weaving, building materials)
Reference: [Hitchcock 1951 Manual grasses US, USDA Misc Publ 200; Clayton & Renvoise 1986 Kew Bull Add Series 13]
See Glossary p. 26 for illustrations of general family characteristics. Generally wind-pollinated.
Annual
Stems prostrate to erect, solitary to clumped
Leaves basal and cauline; sheath open; appendages 0; ligule membranous, toothed at tip; blade flat to inrolled
Inflorescence raceme- or panicle-like
Spikelets subsessile to short-stalked; florets 525, bisexual, breaking above glumes and between florets; glumes equal to subequal, lower lanceolate, 13-veined, upper ± elliptic, 3-veined; lemma firmly membranous, acute to obtuse, 15-veined; palea < lemma
Species in genus: 3 species: Eur
Etymology: (J.B. Desmazieres, French botanist)
Reference: [see discussion in Clapham, Tutin, & Warburg 1952 Fl Brit Isles 1434]