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Dumort. TRIBE AGROSTIDEAE [family ]
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora of Tropical East Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of Tropical East Africa, Part (Part 1), page 1, (1970) Author: W. D. Clayton
Names
Dumort. TRIBE AGROSTIDEAE [family ], Obs. Gram. Belg.: 83, 125 (1823)
Information
Annual or perennial herbs, usually with slender culms. Leaf-blades usually narrow, flat; ligule membranous. Inflorescence an open or contracted, sometimes spike-like, panicle. Spikelets all alike, hermaphrodite, 1-flowered; rhachilla disarticulating above, or rarely below, the glumes, sometimes produced beyond the floret as a slender bristle; glumes usually persistent, mostly as long as or longer than the lemma; lemma hyaline to membranous, 3–5-nerved, commonly with a geniculate dorsal awn, less often awnless, straight-awned, or awned from the 2-lobed tip; palea usually delicate, often small or wanting, 2-nerved; lodicules 2, rarely 0; stamens 1–3; stigmas 2. Grain with small embryo and linear hilum; starch grains compound. Leaf anatomy: chlorenchyma diffuse; bundle-sheaths double; silica-bodies oblong; 2-celled hairs absent; stomatal subsidiary cells parallel-sided or low dome-shaped. Embryo poöïd. Chromosomes large, basic number 7.
Range
Genera ± 40; temperate regions of both hemispheres, extending to mountainous regions in the tropics.
Notes
The genera of Agrostideae are rather heterogeneous, but all have 1-flowered spikelets. It is possible that the tribe is an artificial assemblage of 1-flowered derivatives drawn from XIII, Aveneae and one or two other tribes.
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora of Tropical East Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of Tropical East Africa, Part (Part 1), page 1, (1970) Author: W. D. Clayton
Names
Dumort. TRIBE AGROSTIDEAE [family ], Obs. Gram. Belg.: 83, 125 (1823)
Information
Annual or perennial herbs, usually with slender culms. Leaf-blades usually narrow, flat; ligule membranous. Inflorescence an open or contracted, sometimes spike-like, panicle. Spikelets all alike, hermaphrodite, 1-flowered; rhachilla disarticulating above, or rarely below, the glumes, sometimes produced beyond the floret as a slender bristle; glumes usually persistent, mostly as long as or longer than the lemma; lemma hyaline to membranous, 3–5-nerved, commonly with a geniculate dorsal awn, less often awnless, straight-awned, or awned from the 2-lobed tip; palea usually delicate, often small or wanting, 2-nerved; lodicules 2, rarely 0; stamens 1–3; stigmas 2. Grain with small embryo and linear hilum; starch grains compound. Leaf anatomy: chlorenchyma diffuse; bundle-sheaths double; silica-bodies oblong; 2-celled hairs absent; stomatal subsidiary cells parallel-sided or low dome-shaped. Embryo poöïd. Chromosomes large, basic number 7.
Range
Genera ± 40; temperate regions of both hemispheres, extending to mountainous regions in the tropics.
Notes
The genera of Agrostideae are rather heterogeneous, but all have 1-flowered spikelets. It is possible that the tribe is an artificial assemblage of 1-flowered derivatives drawn from XIII, Aveneae and one or two other tribes.
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (K)
Collection
Flora of Tropical East Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of Tropical East Africa, Part (Part 1), page 1, (1970) Author: W. D. Clayton
Names
Dumort. TRIBE AGROSTIDEAE [family ], Obs. Gram. Belg.: 83, 125 (1823)
Information
Annual or perennial herbs, usually with slender culms. Leaf-blades usually narrow, flat; ligule membranous. Inflorescence an open or contracted, sometimes spike-like, panicle. Spikelets all alike, hermaphrodite, 1-flowered; rhachilla disarticulating above, or rarely below, the glumes, sometimes produced beyond the floret as a slender bristle; glumes usually persistent, mostly as long as or longer than the lemma; lemma hyaline to membranous, 3–5-nerved, commonly with a geniculate dorsal awn, less often awnless, straight-awned, or awned from the 2-lobed tip; palea usually delicate, often small or wanting, 2-nerved; lodicules 2, rarely 0; stamens 1–3; stigmas 2. Grain with small embryo and linear hilum; starch grains compound. Leaf anatomy: chlorenchyma diffuse; bundle-sheaths double; silica-bodies oblong; 2-celled hairs absent; stomatal subsidiary cells parallel-sided or low dome-shaped. Embryo poöïd. Chromosomes large, basic number 7.
Range
Genera ± 40; temperate regions of both hemispheres, extending to mountainous regions in the tropics.
Notes
The genera of Agrostideae are rather heterogeneous, but all have 1-flowered spikelets. It is possible that the tribe is an artificial assemblage of 1-flowered derivatives drawn from XIII, Aveneae and one or two other tribes.
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