Paspalum boscianum

Flüggé
Common names: Bull paspalum
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 25. Treatment on page 579.

Plants annual. Culms 15-96 cm, erect or prostrate, often rooting at the lower nodes; nodes glabrous. Sheaths glabrous; ligules 1-3.2 mm; blades to 56 cm long, 2.2-15 mm wide, flat. Panicles terminal, with 1-10(28) racemosely arranged branches; branches 1.2-8.2 cm, diverging; branch axes 0.7-2.3 mm wide, glabrous, broadly winged, wings about as wide as the central portion, margins scabrous, terminating in a spikelet. Spikelets 2-2.2 mm long, 1.3-1.8 mm wide, paired, appressed to the branch axes, glabrous, broadly elliptic, obovate, or orbicular, light to dark brown. Lower glumes absent; upper glumes glabrous, 5-veined, margins entire; lower lemmas glabrous, 3-5-veined, margins entire; upper florets dark glossy brown. Caryopses 1.4-1.6 mm, white. 2n = 40.

Distribution

Puerto Rico, Md., Miss., Tex., La., Pa., Ala., Tenn., N.C., S.C., Va., Ark., Ga., Ky., Fla.

Discussion

Paspalum boscianum grows in moist to dry, disturbed areas, and at the edges of forests. It is native from the southeastern United States through the West Indies and Mexico to Brazil. The California record came from a weed in a rice field.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.