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Aristida palustris (Chapm.) Vasey  

No occurrences found

Family: Poaceae
longleaf threeawn
[Aristida affinis (Schult.) Kunth]
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  • FNA
  • Gleason & Cronquist
  • Resources
Kelly W. Allred. Flora of North America

Plants perennial; cespitose, bases hard, knotty. Culms 90-150 cm, often thickened basally, stiffly erect, usually unbranched; internodes hollow. Leaves cauline; sheaths usually shorter than the internodes, glabrous, remaining intact at maturity; collars glabrous; ligules to 0.1 mm; blades (8)10-30(35) cm long, 2-4 mm wide, usually flat, occasionally loosely involute, lax, glabrous, light yellow-green to bluish-green when young, drying brownish. Inflorescences paniculate, 25-45(55) cm long, 3-6 cm wide; nodes glabrous; primary branches 2-8 cm, usually single or paired, appressed to erect, occasionally ascending, without axillary pulvini, with (1)2-12 spikelets. Spikelets overlapping, appressed. Glumes subequal, (7.5)9-13.5 mm, stiff, glabrous or scabridulous, light brown or greenish-brown; lower glumes prominently 2-veined, 2-keeled by the development of 1 lateral vein, shortly (1-2 mm) awn-tipped; upper glumes 1-veined, shortly (0.5-1 mm) awn-tipped; calluses 1-1.4 mm; lemmas 6-9 mm, glabrous, 0.3-0.5 mm wide distally, light tan to brown, junction with the awns not evident; awns not disarticulating at maturity; central awns 15-40 mm, usually strongly curved basally, strongly divergent to horizontal distally; lateral awns 8-35 mm, at least 1/2 as long as the central awns, erect to strongly divergent; anthers 3, about 3 mm, purplish. Caryopses 4.4-5 mm, chestnut brown. 2n = unknown.

Aristida palustris is endemic to the southeastern United States, where it grows in seepage bogs, pitcher plant savannahs, wet pine flatwoods, bald-cypress depressions, and wet prairies. It is a distinctive species of the southeastern coastal plain region that differs from A. lanosa in several reproductive, vegetative, and habitat characteristics.

Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Much like no. 3 [Aristida virgata Trin.], often taller, to 15 dm; sheaths glabrous to pilose (the hairs often appressed); lvs 2-4 mm wide; first glume with a lateral vein on one side only, scabrous on the keel, 8-14 mm; second glume 1-veined, subglabrous, 10-13 mm, usually slightly exceeding the first; lemma 7-10 mm, its central awn 1.5-4 cm, when dry reflexed to a nearly horizontal position; lateral awns 1-3 cm, ascending. Cumberland Plateau in Ky.; damp woods of the coastal plain from N.C. to Fla. and Tex. (A. affinis, misapplied)

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
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