Bouteloua kayi

Warnock
Common names: Kay’s grama
Endemic
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 25. Treatment on page 264.

Plants perennial; cespitose, without rhizomes or stolons. Culms 10-50 cm, erect; nodes glabrous; internodes glabrous, scabridulous between the veins. Leaves mostly basal; sheaths scabridulous or glabrous, sparsely pubescent basally; ligules 0.3-0.5 mm, membranous, ciliate; blades to 20 cm long, 0.5-1.5 mm wide, involute, scabridulous adaxially. Panicles 8-11 cm, with 7-20 branches; branches 15-30 mm, persistent, with (6)14-20 pedicellate spikelets, axes terminating in a spikelet; pedicels 0.6-0.8 mm; disarticulation above the glumes. Spikelets 6-8 mm, pectinate, with 1 bisexual and 1 rudimentary floret. Glumes subequal, 2.5-4 mm, glabrous, acute or bidentate, midvein sometimes excurrent as a mucro or short awn; lowest lemmas 5-7 mm, glabrous, 3-awned, awns 3-4 mm, central awns flanked by 2 membranous, acuminate, 0.4—0.6 mm lobes; lowest paleas sometimes reduced to 2 awns, awns 1-2 mm, anthers 1.2-1.3 mm, yellow; second florets glabrous, reduced to 1-3 awns, awns 3-4 mm. 2n = unknown.

Discussion

Bouteloua kayi is only known from the mountainous limestone terrain along the Rio Grande River in south-western Brewster County, Texas, at 2200-2500 m. Superficially, it resembles B. trifida.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.