Identifying the Genera of Central Florida Grasses Growing Wild

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Identifying the Genera of Central Florida Grasses Growing Wild Christopher S. Matson Generously provided to the Central Florida CISMA

Simple, spiny spikes Chasmanthium wood oats Shin to waist high Not sharp, sometimes has intermittent lateral spikelets Found in woodlands and hammocks Cenchrus sand spur/sandbur Ankle to just below knee-high Sharp spines Has no lateral spikelets Found in disturbed xeric sand

Sorghastrum--Indiangrass Tall bunchgrass flowers late September, seed drops mid- October 2 species in area Various non-spiny, simple spikes Imperata, cogongrass Silky plume becomes cottony at maturity Colonial grass occurs in thick patches Leaves are basal, up to 6 feet long Our worst grass weed Silky, plume-like simple spike Eragrostis ciliaris gophertail lovegrass Silky plume on knee high, bunchy grass with lots of leaves on stems Multiple florets per spikelet Annual of dry waste places Schizachyrium, Elionurus Single spike per lateral stem Bearded florets Schizachyrium is knee to head high in many habitats

Peg-like, jointed spikes Coelorachis, Tripsacum Coelorachis (mostly bunches in wet ground), Hemarthria (colonial patches in wet ground), Tripsacum (bunchgrass), Paspalidium (semi-aquatic), Eremechloa (a short plant), Rottboellia Two or more peg-joint spikes from lateral and terminal points

Singular/forked/radiating spikes Stenotaphrum (St. Augustinegrass) Well-watered lawns Thick, spongy and low-growing Andropogon (bluestem grasses) Bunchgrasses in wet to xeric habitats Chloris gayana (rare), Cynodon, Eustachys, Dactyloctenium, Eleusine, Gymnopogon, Reimarchloa Bearded (fuzzy) lateral spikes with 2 or more forks joined per peduncle (shared stem) Axonopus, Digitaria, Eleusine, Paspalum Singular or forked (rarely 3 spikes) with florets attached to a rachis, not two-ranked like in Digitaria Variety of habitats Singular or simple-forked spikes Attached to a rachis, no bearding on florets 3 or more forks, florets attached to rachis (not two-ranked like Digitaria, no beards on florets

Granular spikes Polypogon, Setaria Awned and granular terminal spike like foxtail or rabbit foot Sporobolus, Dichanthelium Granular spikes, awns not evident

Various comb-like spikes Bouteloua hirsuta hairy grammagrass Short grass in xeric habitat Ctenium toothachegrass Waist high or higher in wetter habitat Spartina cordgrass Tall bunchgrass in wet ground and landscaping, from thigh high up to chest high Dactyloctenium Multiple, radiating spikes per head Disturbed soil Low growing, ankle to shin high

Tall grasses with silky or plume-like spikes Arundo, Saccharum, Phragmites Saccharum plumegrass Chest high or higher in wetter habitat, usually over head high in flower and seed Sometimes very hairy, sometimes nearly hair-free Bunch-forming Arundo donax giant reed Colony-forming, very broad leaves, in waste places and biofuel plantings Phragmites common reed In wetlands of varying conditions; as of 2010 no known non-native invasive strains in FL natural areas; very broad leaves Saccharum giganteum

Single, long awns Chrysopogon pauciflorus Chrysopogon, Piptochaetium Knee to waist high grasses Leaf blades long and narrow, mostly basal Long awned seeds appear as though you could sew with them Seeds are sharp-pointed at the base Hyparrhenia rufa Jaraguagrass Very tall grass (shoulder high to taller) found in rangeland plantings and in disturbed areas; can invade disturbed natural areas Leafy plants form bunches, but can grow thick enough to look colonial Stems thick Flower spikes similar to Heteropogon contortus (shown) Piptochaetium Heteropogon contortus tanglehead 3-8 feet tall, leaf blades much narrower than Jaraguagrass Stems thin, not as leafy as Jaraguagrass Heteropogon contortus

Three awns per floret, spikes simplelooking or a panicle Aristida Bunchgrasses Wiregrass (A. stricta) fire-managed lands from wet prairie flow-ways to sandhill in wetness Bottlebrush threeawn (A. spiciformis) flowers in years of fire-absence A. palustris, purpurescens, patula found in wetter places A. gyrans, oligantha, rhizomophora more xeric ground There are other Aristidas in the area as well

Detail of paired florets in spikelet branches on Digitaria Paired pedunculate florets form spikelet branches on each lateral raceme Digitaria Many lateral racemes on a compressed principle rachis over a squat, spreading, bunchy plant Gymnopogon Lateral racemes from short principle rachis Lateral raceme on a short principle rachis Chloris gayana Cymbopogon Eleusine (goosegrass)

Simple panicles Florets not conspicuously awned Cymbopogon Eriochloa Panicum Paspalum Florets conspicuously awned Echinochloa Oplismenus Simple panicle/loose raceme, elongated florets Amphicarpum Leersia Simple panicle, some branching common Triplasis

(Simple panicles, continued) Sporobolus Glumes >6 mm long on panicle with spikelets of 1 floret Agrostis Glumes more or less equal to grain in overall Stature, glumes under 6 mm Simple or branched panicles with fuzzy florets Rhynchelytrum repens (syn. Melinis repens) Rose natalgrass Some lower foliage tends to redden and turn straw color before plant is fully mature Bunching grass can node-root and creep Florets turn from rose-red in flower to amber to frosty whitish-hairy with amber undertones as mature seed Branching spreads close to 90 degrees Anthaenantia Looks like silk-hairy grains rather than fuzzy and hidden as in Rhynchelytrum easy to make out granular character of hairy florets in Anthaenantia Branches form ascending, acute, rather than spreading sub-perpendicular angles Anthaenantia rubra Anthaenantia villosa

Branched panicles One floret per spikelet With awns Muhlenbergia capillaris Phanopyrum Sorghum Some Sporobolus Zizaniopsis Awnless Agrostis perennans Dichanthelium Leptochloa Panicum Pharus (super rare, has bamboo leaves) Poa Rhynchelytrum (fuzzy florets) Multiple florets per spikelet; spikelets shorter than 1 cm, not discernably drooping on branches Eragrostis Leptochloa Tridens

Simple or branched panicle with multiple florets per spikelet; spikelets over 1 cm long, drooping or dangling habit Bromus Chasmanthium latifolium (out of range, but included) Festuca Leptochloa Tridens Bromus

Bamboo-like with clustered, broad leaves Arundinaria Upright, colonyforming grass waist high to twice your height or slightly more, found growing with other native plants in the northern half of FL Bambusa Can be as small as Arundinaria, but usually much larger and denser growing Found where people have planted or tried to discard this plant, not usually in diverse native habitats away from disturbance Pharus extremely rare plant Veins are pronounced on the top side of leaf rather than bottom Open panicle Not depicted, but leaves similar to below, left Pharus is only known on a single mound site Dichanthelium scabriusculum (syn. Panicum scabriusculum) Woolly witchgrass Clusters of leaves surround the flower panicles Found in patches in wet prairies and pond edges Plant stems can be from 2 feet to head high Very leafy, stems are brittle when leaves turn tan Dichanthelium scabriusculum

Fuzzy spikes on upper quarter of plant, not Andropogon or simple terminal plumes Cymbopogon citratus (lemongrass) Fuzzy spikes on upper quarter of plant Spikes not uniformly forked, rather they are raceme-like clusters Foliage, stems and flowers all smell of lemon oil when plant is disturbed or crushed Bothriochloa Fuzzy spikes are terminal and lateral Spikes not simply forked or radiating, but branched from a principle rachis Bothriochloa Cymbopogon citratus

Aquatic plant with staminate and pistillate flowers growing separately Luziola watergrass Forms mats on water, mud or sand surface L. fluitans small leaves, usually about 1-2 inches long Very narrow stems, like wire L. subintegra larger leaves several inches long swollen sheaths allow plants to float in open water similar to Paspalum repens in general habit Terminal staminate flowers Terminal staminate flowers Lateral pistillate flowers Lateral pistillate flowers Zizania aquatica (wild rice) Zizania aquatica Aquatic Tall, chest to over head high