Plants perennial. Culms (10)30-110 cm, round or basally compressed,
tillering from the basal nodes, not branching from the aerial nodes, mostly glabrous,
sometimes pilose basally; internodes solid. Sheaths sometimes with
a pilose collar; ligules 1-2 mm, truncate, erose; blades (2)8-35
cm long, 2-8 mm wide, glabrous, strigose, or pilose. Panicles 8-20 cm,
with 2-15 subdigitate or racemose branches; secondary panicles often hidden
in the lowest leaf sheaths; branches 2-19 cm, ascending to spreading at
maturity. Spikelets 4-12 mm, light brown to dark olive green, with 4-13
florets, often widely divergent at anthesis. Glumes narrowly triangular
to ovate, acute; lower glumes 2.3-4.8 mm; upper glumes 3.3-6 mm;
lemmas 3.5-5 mm, membranous, ovate to obovate, lateral veins glabrous or
sericeous, hairs often restricted to the basal portion, sometimes also sericeous
on the midvein and between the veins, apices obtuse to truncate, usually emarginate,
unawned, sometimes mucronate; paleas ciliate on the margins; anthers
3, 0.3-1.6 mm. Caryopses 1.5-2.3 mm long, 0.9-1 mm wide, strongly dorsally
compressed. 2n = 40, 60, 80.
Leptochloa dubia grows from the southwestern United States and Florida
through Mexico to Argentina, often in well-drained, sandy or rocky soils. It provides
fair to good forage, but is seldom abundant.
FNA 2003, Gould 1980
Common Name: green sprangletop Duration: Perennial Nativity: Native Lifeform: Graminoid General: Large perennial grass, 40-150 cm in height, with tough, knotty base and well-developed roots, tillering from the basal nodes and not branching aerially, often with a purple tinge. Vegetative: Sheath open, glabrous, keeled and flattened, purple-tinged; blades 4-5 mm wide, 15-25 cm long, flat, glabrous, scabrous, or sparsely pilose; ligule membranous, ciliate, about 0.5 mm long, occasionally appearing ciliate. Inflorescence: Panicle of 2-15 spike-like branches, racemosely arranged, flexible and drooping, 4-12 cm long and well spaced on upper 5-20 cm of stem; secondary panicles often hidden in the lowest leaf sheaths. Panicle branches triangular in cross-section, bases of branches with minute hairs; spikelets 6-10 mm long and four to seven flowered; glumes lanceolate, awnless, the first glume 2-5 mm long, the second glume 3-4 mm, persistent; lemmas 3-5 mm long, glabrous or with appressed pubescent nerves, ovate or oblong, dorsally compressed; spikelets breaking apart above glumes and between florets, each floret falling with its segment of the rachis. Ecology: Found on dry slopes, plateaus, rocky slopes; 2,500-6,000 ft (762-1829 m); flowers July-October. Distribution: Much of the southern half of the US from CA east to Maryland; south to s MEX; also in South America. Notes: Until very recently this plant was known as Leptochloa dubia; it is still found under that name even in newer texts, including the Flora Neomexicana (Allred and Ivey 2012). A variable perennial which can often be quite robust to 1.5 m tall; distinguished by its larger leaf width and length, and especially the inflorescences with widely diverging, branches 2-19 cm long, sometimes at ca. 90-degree angles from the axis; each inflorescence branch has two rows of multi-flowered spikelets which upon close inspection, possess obtuse to truncate-tipped florets, usually with small notches in the ends. Ethnobotany: Forage and hay for livestock. Etymology: Disakisperma comes from the Greek words dis-, twice, -akis-, point, and -sperma, seed, alluding to the bicuspid tip of the seed; dubia means doubtful because Carl Kunth, the botanist who originally described the species, was unsure which to genus it belonged. Synonyms: Leptochloa dubia, Chloris dubia, Diplachne dubia Editor: SBuckley 2010, FSCoburn 2014, AHazelton 2015