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Tripsacum dactyloides (L.) L.

Distribution ( Espanhol; Castelhano )

fornecido por IABIN
Chile Central
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direitos autorais
Universidad de Santiago de Chile
autor
Pablo Gutierrez
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Comprehensive Description ( Inglês )

fornecido por North American Flora
Tripsacum floridanum Porter ; Vasey, Contr. U. S. Nat, Herb
3:6. 1892.
Tripsacum dactyloides floridanum Beal, Grasses N. Am. 2 : 19. 1896.
Smooth and glabrous. Stems up to 1 m. tall, slender, from stout horizontal rootstocks ; leaf-blades up to 4 dm. long, usually under 5 mm. wide, rarely broader, long-acuminate, narrowed toward the base ; spikes on the branches and at the summit of the stem single, 8-20 cm. long, slender, the lower one quarter or less pistillate ; pistillate spikelets 6-7 mm. long, the outer scale acute to acuminate ; staminate spikelets 5-6 mm. long, the outer 2 scales glabrous or pubescent, oblong, obtuse to acutish.
Type locality : Miami, Florida. Distribution : Southern Florida.
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citação bibliográfica
Percy Wilson, Per Axel Rydberg, Norman Taylor, Nathaniel Lord Britton, John Kunkel Small, George Valentine Nash. 1909. PANDANALES-POALES; TYPHACEAE, SPARGANACEAE, ELODEACEAE, HYDROCHARITACEAE, ZANNICHELLIACEAE, ZOSTERACEAE, CYMODOCEACEAE, NAIADACEAE, LILAEACEAE, SCHEUCHZERIACEAE, ALISMACEAE, BUTOMACEAE, POACEAE (pars). North American flora. vol 17(1). New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY
original
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North American Flora

Comprehensive Description ( Inglês )

fornecido por North American Flora
Tripsacum dactyloides L,. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 1261. 1759
Coix dactyloides L. Sp. PI. 972. 1753.
Tripsacum monosiachyum Willd. Hort. Berol. 1:1. 1803.
Tripsacum dactyloides monostachyon Wood, Class Book 453. 1845.
Tripsacum compressum Fourn. Bull. Soc. Bot. Belg. 15 : 466. 1876. Not T, compressum Rasp.
1825. Tripsacum dactyloides hispidum Hitchc. Bot. Gaz. 41 : 295. 1906.
Stems glabrous, or sometimes pubescent below the inflorescence, up to 2.5 m. tall, from stout horizontal rootstocks; leaf -sheaths glabrous, or hirsute at the apex; blades up to 6 dm. long, usually 1-2 cm. wide, rarely broader, longacuminate, narrowed at the base, glabrous, or sometimes hirsute or hispid on the upper surface ; spikes usually single on the branches, often 2-4 at the summit of the stem, 1-3 dm. long, the lower one quarter to one half pistillate ; pistillate spikelets 7-10 mm. long, the first or outer scale broadly ovate, acute ; staminate spikelets 7-11 mm. long, the outer 2 scales oblong, from rounded to acute at the apex, glabrous or pubescent.
Type locality : America.
Distribution: Rhode Island to Nebraska, south to Florida, Texas, and Mexico; southern Bahamas ; Haiti ; also in South America.
licença
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
citação bibliográfica
Percy Wilson, Per Axel Rydberg, Norman Taylor, Nathaniel Lord Britton, John Kunkel Small, George Valentine Nash. 1909. PANDANALES-POALES; TYPHACEAE, SPARGANACEAE, ELODEACEAE, HYDROCHARITACEAE, ZANNICHELLIACEAE, ZOSTERACEAE, CYMODOCEACEAE, NAIADACEAE, LILAEACEAE, SCHEUCHZERIACEAE, ALISMACEAE, BUTOMACEAE, POACEAE (pars). North American flora. vol 17(1). New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY
original
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North American Flora

Physical Description ( Inglês )

fornecido por USDA PLANTS text
Perennials, Terrestrial, not aquatic, Prop roots present, Rhizomes present, Rhizome short and compact, stems close, Stems nodes swollen or brittle, Stems erect or ascending, Stems geniculate, decumbent, or lax, sometimes rooting at nodes, Stems terete, round in cross section, or polygonal, Stem internodes solid or spongy, Stems with inflorescence 1-2 m tall, Stems with inflorescence 2-6 m tall, Stems, culms, or scapes exceeding basal leaves, Leaves mostly basal, below middle of stem, Leaves mostly cauline, Leaves conspicuously 2-ranked, distichous, Leaves sheathing at base, Leaf sheath mostly open, or loose, Leaf sheath smooth, glabrous, Leaf sheath and blade differentiated, Leaf blades linear, Leaf blades 1-2 cm wide, Leaf blades 2 or more cm wide, Leaf blades mostly flat, Leaf blades mostly glabrous, Leaf blades scabrous, roughened, or wrinkled, Ligule present, Ligule a fringed, ciliate, or lobed membrane, Inflorescence t erminal, Inflorescence solitary, with 1 spike, fascicle, glomerule, head, or cluster per stem or culm, Inflorescence a panicle with narrowly racemose or spicate branches, Inflorescence a panicle with digitately arranged spicate branches, Inflorescence with 2-10 branches, Inflorescence branches paired or digitate at a single node, Inflorescence branches paired racemes, V-shaped, Flowers unisexual, Plants monoecious, Spikelets pedicellate, Spikelets sessile or subsessile, Spikelets dorsally compressed or terete, Spikelet 3-10 mm wide, Spikelet less than 3 mm wide, Spikelets with 2 florets, Spikelets solitary at rachis nodes, Spikelets unisexual, Spikelets disarticulating below the glumes, Spikelets disarticulating beneath or between the florets, Spikelets falling with parts of disarticulating rachis or pedicel, Inflorescence branches deciduous, falling intact, Spikelets closely appressed or embedded in concave portions of axis, Monoecious - staminate and pistillate spikelets o n same inflorescence, Glumes present, empty bracts, Glumes 2 clearly present, Glumes distinctly unequal, Glumes equal to or longer than adjacent lemma, Lemmas thin, chartaceous, hyaline, cartilaginous, or membranous, Lemma glabrous, Lemma apex truncate, rounded, or obtuse, Lemma awnless, Lemma margins thin, lying flat, Lemma straight, Palea membranous, hyaline, Palea shorter than lemma, Stamens 3, Styles 2-fid, deeply 2-branched, Stigmas 2, Fruit - caryopsis.
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compilador
Dr. David Bogler
fonte
Missouri Botanical Garden
fonte
USDA NRCS NPDC
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USDA PLANTS text

Tripsacum dactyloides ( Inglês )

fornecido por wikipedia EN

Tripsacum dactyloides, commonly called eastern gamagrass,[3] or Fakahatchee grass, is a warm-season, sod-forming bunch grass.[4] It is widespread in the Western Hemisphere, native from the eastern United States to northern South America.[5] Its natural habitat is in sunny moist areas, such as along watercourses and in wet prairies.[5] In some areas, it has adapted well to disturbed conditions.[6]

Eastern gamagrass is a widely cultivated for its use as forage.

Description

Usually gamagrass grows to a height of 2–3 feet (0.61–0.91 m), but it can be as high as 8–10 ft (2.4–3.0 m). Tripsacum dactyloides is one of the species in the family Poaceae, tribe Andropogoneae, and subtribe Tripsacinae. As the plant is a distant relative of corn, it shares common subtribes with the Zea mays corn species.[7]

Roots: Eastern gamagrass has several short, fibrous, thick rhizomes.[8] Eastern gamagrass can survive droughts and floods for a long time because of its rigid and thick rhizomatous roots which firmly holding the plant upright.[9] The deep and hollow roots of the plant branch out from lower nodes.

Leaves: Since the grass has short internodes, all the leaves grow out from the plant's base. Each clump's diameter can increase up to 4 ft (1.2 m).[8] The stems and leaves have a purplish color and are glabrous. The glabrous leaf-blade is around 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in) long, 9–35 millimetres (0.35–1.38 in) wide and has hairs at the base. The distinct midrib leaves of gamagrass can grow up to a height of 12–24 inches (300–610 mm) and a width of 0.375–0.75 in (9.5–19.1 mm).[4]

Flowers: The flowers of eastern gamagrass, which blooms from late March to early October, consist of spikes made up of female and male spikelets. Tripsacum dactyloides has separate female and male flowers on the same individual making it a monoecious plant. The inflorescence of the terminal axillary bud is 10–30 centimetres (3.9–11.8 in) long. The type of inflorescence is usually a single raceme or a panicle with a combination of two to three unisexual single racemes.[10]

Fruits: The seed-producing season of the grass is from June to September. The seeds mature disproportionally and production is commonly slow.[11] The joints of the seedhead break into two as the fruit matures and each seed-bearing part contains one seed.[7] The size of the seedhead can range from 6 to 10 inches. Usually spikelets of grass assist reproduction by holding the grain and fruit. When the mature female spikelets are destroyed they separate like pop-beads.

Distribution

Tripsacum dactyloides is widely spread throughout the United States, from Connecticut to Nebraska and south to Florida and Texas. It is also found as far south as South America, in Paraguay and Brazil. The plant has been cultivated outside of its native range in the southwestern United States and elsewhere.[7]

Cultivation

The best growing conditions for eastern gamagrass are provided by wet land, such as floodplains along riverbanks. Moreover, moist, nonalkaline lowland areas will maintain the growth of gamagrass because the land can endure a longer time under flood conditions.[7] The soil that is most suitable for eastern gamagrass is moist, little drained fertile soil that has an annual precipitation of 900–1,500 mm (35–59 in) and a pH of 5.5 to 7.5.

Tripsacum dactyloides can tolerate a maximum of three weeks of flooding without dying. The deep roots, which extend to around 4.5 m (15 ft) underground, are the key structure that allows gamagrass to tolerate drought.[7]

Uses

Eastern gamagrass was widely considered a high class feedcrop among the early settlers of the United States. However, it started to disappear because of grain crops and cattle grazing. Around the late 1980s and early 1990s, people started to pay attention again to eastern gamagrass as a good productive forage in summer, since it is productive, palatable and easily digestible by almost all cattle. For these reasons, gamagrass is ideally suitable for feed crops, including hay and pasture forage for which rotation of grazing seasons is controlled. It is used as forage because the growing season of the grass is earlier compared to other warm-season grasses and later compared to cool-season grass and legumes.[7] Eastern gamagrass requires a moderate amount of carbohydrates stored in the leaf bases for regrowth. If the plant is grazed before carbohydrate accumulates in the leaf bases the plant will die from overgrazing.[7]

Gamagrass is also suitable as a wildlife habitat. Hollow space in the middle of dispersed bundles and the tented canopy created by the leaves growing from the rhizomes and dropping into the middle make the plant an attractive location for wildlife. For example, the empty space in the middle of bundles is large enough for wild animals like quails and prairie chickens to build nests. Moreover, the grass provides good cover during the winter for grassland sparrows.[9]

Gamagrass grows from mid-April to mid-September. This is a little earlier in the year compared to other native warm-season grasses like big bluestem, (Andropogon gerardi) and switch grass, (Panicum virgatum). The high relative yield of gamagrass in summer is the major reason why this grass is a good feedcrop when cool-season grasses ("tall fescue") are undeveloped.[8]

Genetics

Hybrids have been created by combining Zea mays and the octoploid (2n = 72) form of T. dactyloides.[12]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tripsacum dactyloides.
  1. ^ "Tripsacum dactyloides". Natureserve.org. May 5, 2023. Retrieved May 13, 2023.
  2. ^ The Plant List, Tripsacum dactyloides (L.) L.
  3. ^ USDA, NRCS (n.d.). "Tripsacum dactyloides". The PLANTS Database (plants.usda.gov). Greensboro, North Carolina: National Plant Data Team. Retrieved 15 December 2015.
  4. ^ a b "EASTERN GAMAGRASS" (PDF). United States Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Censervation Service: 1–2. 5 Feb 2002. Retrieved 20 April 2012.
  5. ^ a b Tripsacum Grass Manual on the Web. Archived from the original on April 15, 2017. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  6. ^ Alan Weakley (2015). "Flora of the Southern and Mid-Atlantic States".
  7. ^ a b c d e f g "Eastern Gamagrass" (PDF). United States Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service: 1–3. May 1996.
  8. ^ a b c Roberts, Craig; Robert Kallenbach (1996). "Eastern Gamagrass" (PDF). MU Guide: 1–4.
  9. ^ a b "Eastern Gamagrass". Houston Audubon.
  10. ^ "Tripsacum dactyloides". Tropical Forages. Retrieved 20 April 2012.
  11. ^ "Eastern Gamagrass". Johnston Enterprises. Retrieved 20 April 2012.
  12. ^ J. M. J. de Wet & J. R. Harlan (1974). "Tripsacum–maize interaction: a novel cytogenetic system" (PDF). Genetics. 78 (1): 493–502. doi:10.1093/genetics/78.1.493. PMC 1213208. PMID 17248666.
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Wikipedia authors and editors
original
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wikipedia EN

Tripsacum dactyloides: Brief Summary ( Inglês )

fornecido por wikipedia EN

Tripsacum dactyloides, commonly called eastern gamagrass, or Fakahatchee grass, is a warm-season, sod-forming bunch grass. It is widespread in the Western Hemisphere, native from the eastern United States to northern South America. Its natural habitat is in sunny moist areas, such as along watercourses and in wet prairies. In some areas, it has adapted well to disturbed conditions.

Eastern gamagrass is a widely cultivated for its use as forage.

licença
cc-by-sa-3.0
direitos autorais
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visite a fonte
site do parceiro
wikipedia EN

Tripsacum dactyloides ( Francês )

fornecido por wikipedia FR

Tripsacum dactyloides, l'herbe grama, est une plante tropicale herbacée vivace de la famille des Poaceae. Cette espèce est originaire du Mexique et du Guatemala, mais a été répandu dans de nombreux pays tropicaux, notamment en Asie, comme plante fourragère. Elle peut dans certaines conditions s'hybrider avec le maïs cultivé bien que son nombre de chromosomes soit différent (2n=36).

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Tripsacum dactyloides ( Vietnamita )

fornecido por wikipedia VI

Tripsacum dactyloides là một loài thực vật có hoa trong họ Hòa thảo. Loài này được (L.) L. miêu tả khoa học đầu tiên năm 1759.[1]

Hình ảnh

Chú thích

  1. ^ The Plant List (2010). Tripsacum dactyloides. Truy cập ngày 9 tháng 6 năm 2013.

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Bài viết chủ đề tông thực vật Andropogoneae này vẫn còn sơ khai. Bạn có thể giúp Wikipedia bằng cách mở rộng nội dung để bài được hoàn chỉnh hơn.
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Wikipedia tác giả và biên tập viên
original
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wikipedia VI

Tripsacum dactyloides: Brief Summary ( Vietnamita )

fornecido por wikipedia VI

Tripsacum dactyloides là một loài thực vật có hoa trong họ Hòa thảo. Loài này được (L.) L. miêu tả khoa học đầu tiên năm 1759.

licença
cc-by-sa-3.0
direitos autorais
Wikipedia tác giả và biên tập viên
original
visite a fonte
site do parceiro
wikipedia VI