Difference between revisions of "Megathyrsus maximus"

(Jacq.) B.K. Simon & S.W.L. Jacobs
Common names: Guinea grass
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 25.
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|discussion=<p><i>Megathyrsus maximus</i> is an important forage grass that is native to Africa. In the Flora region, it grows in fields, waste places, stream banks, and hammocks. It is cultivated widely as a forage grass at low elevations, especially near the coast, and often escapes.</p><!--
 
|discussion=<p><i>Megathyrsus maximus</i> is an important forage grass that is native to Africa. In the Flora region, it grows in fields, waste places, stream banks, and hammocks. It is cultivated widely as a forage grass at low elevations, especially near the coast, and often escapes.</p><!--
--><p>There are usually two varieties recognized. Only <i>Megathyrsus maximus</i> (Jacq.) R.D. Webster <i></i>var.<i> maxima</i>, which has glabrous spikelets, is known in the Flora area. Specimens with densely pubescent spikelets belong to U. maxima var. trichoglumis (Robyns) R.D. Webster.</p>
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--><p>There are usually two varieties recognized. Only <i>Megathyrsus maximus</i> (Jacq.) R.D. Webster <i></i>var.<i> maxima</i>, which has glabrous spikelets, is known in the Flora area. Specimens with densely pubescent spikelets belong to M. maxima var. trichoglumis (Robyns) R.D. Webster.</p>
 
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Revision as of 19:37, 10 May 2021

Plants perennial; cespitose, with short, thick rhizomes. Culms (60)100-250 cm tall, about 10 mm thick, mostly erect, sometimes geniculate and rooting at the lower nodes; nodes pubescent or glabrous. Sheaths usually shorter than the internodes, glabrous or pubescent, sometimes with papillose-based hairs, margins sometimes ciliate; collars densely pubescent, hairs appressed or divergent; ligules 1-3 mm; blades (15)30-75(100) cm long, 10-35 mm wide, flat, erect or ascending, glabrous or pubescent, sometimes with appressed papillose-based hairs, margins scabrous, sometimes ciliate basally, midveins conspicuous, sunken, whitish. Panicles 20-65 cm, about 1/3 as wide as long, open, rachises smooth or scabrous; primary branches usually more than 20, 12-40 cm, axes 0.4-0.6 mm wide, not winged, ascending, those of the lower node(s) verticillate and pilose at the base, upper axils glabrous, lower branches naked basally; secondary and tertiary branches well-developed; pedicels 0.5-1.5 mm, unequal, straight or curved, glabrous or with a single setaceous hair near the apex. Spikelets 2.7-3.6 mm long, 0.9-1.1 mm wide, oblong-ellipsoid, usually glabrous (rarely densely covered with papillose-based hairs), solitary, paired (or in triplets), usually appressed to the branch axes. Glumes scarcely separate, rachilla between the glumes not pronounced; lower glumes 0.8-1.2 mm, 1-3-veined, obtuse or truncate, glabrous; upper glumes 2.1-3.5 mm, 5-veined, glabrous; lower lemmas 2.1-3.5 mm, subequal, glabrous, 5-veined, without cross venation, acute, muticous or mucronate; lower florets staminate; upper lemmas 1.9-2.4 mm, ellipsoid, pale, glabrous, apices acute, mucronulate; anthers 1.2-2.2 mm. 2n = 18, 32, 36, 44, 48.

Discussion

Megathyrsus maximus is an important forage grass that is native to Africa. In the Flora region, it grows in fields, waste places, stream banks, and hammocks. It is cultivated widely as a forage grass at low elevations, especially near the coast, and often escapes.

There are usually two varieties recognized. Only Megathyrsus maximus (Jacq.) R.D. Webster var. maxima, which has glabrous spikelets, is known in the Flora area. Specimens with densely pubescent spikelets belong to M. maxima var. trichoglumis (Robyns) R.D. Webster.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.