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Published In: Prodromus Florae Novae Hollandiae 169–170. 1810. (Prodr.) Name publication detailView in BotanicusView in Biodiversity Heritage Library
 

Project Name Data (Last Modified On 6/2/2011)
Acceptance : Accepted
Project Data     (Last Modified On 6/3/2011)
General/Distribution: A genus of about 150 species mainly in the tropics and subtropics, with some species extending to warm temperate regions; 10 species occur in Pakistan.
Comment/Acknowledgements: A large genus not divisible into well defined sections, although clusters of closely allied species are readily apparent. Within the clusters, and to a lesser extent between them, the boundaries between species are seldom clear-cut, and the occurrence of intermediates appears to be the rule rather than the exception.

 

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Annuals or perennials. Culms usually erect. Inflorescence a panicle, open or contracted, rarely spiciform, exserted from the uppermost sheath, the branches whorled or not. Spikelets small, fusiform, nearly always glabrous, awnless; palea 2-nerved. Fruit rounded or truncate at the tip, not beaked, the pericarp commonly swelling when wetted and ejecting the seed.
 

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1.Panicle branches in whorls; panicle open or sometimes loosely contracted
2.Annual
Sporobolus coromandelianus
2.Perennial
3.Harsh tussocky desert grass; leaves glaucous, involute, stiff and pungent
Sporobolus arabicus
3.Not or rarely a desert grass; leaves glaucous or green, flat or loosely inrolled, stiff or soft, attenuate but not pungent
4.Coastal grass; leaves glaucous, stiff, flat or loosely inrolled; spikelets 2.2-2.6(3) mm long
Sporobolus kentrophyllus
4.Grass of dryish or seasonally wet soils in the plains; leaves green, soft, flat; spikelets 1.5-2.2 mm long
Sporobolus ioclados
1.Panicle branches not whorled, or with a single whorl at the base
5.Panicle dense, spike-like or with the spikelets clustered about the whole length of the primary branches; lateral pedicels 0.1-0.5 mm long, stout, appressed
6.Leaf-blades flat, not pungent; lower glume as long as the spikelet
Sporobolus helvolus
6.Leaf-blades often involute, pungent; lower glume 3/5- 4/5 as long as the spikelet
7.Spikelets 1.9-2.5 mm long; leaf-blades up to 10 cm long and 4 mm wide; grain subglobose
Sporobolus virginicus
7.Spikelets 1.4-2.1 mm long; leaf-blades up to 3 cm long (rarely as long as 5 cm) and 0.4-1.7 mm wide; grain broadly oblong
Sporobolus tremulus
5.Panicle loose and diffuse, or if with the spikelets clustered then the base of the primary branches bare
8.Panicle contracted, subspiciform, interrupted
Sporobolus tourneuxii
8.Panicle diffuse, at least at maturity
9.Spikelets 1.7-2.1 mm long, scattered; glumes acute; grain ellipsoid
Sporobolus nervosus
9.Spikelets 1.2-1.6 mm long, rather crowded; glumes obtuse; grain oblong, truncate at the tip
Sporobolus diander
 
 
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