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- Dichotomous Key
- Poaceae
- Poaceae Group 5
- Bouteloua
- Bouteloua simplex
Bouteloua simplex — mat grama
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Facts
Mat grama is native to Wyoming and south through Mexico, Central America, and western South America as far as Chile and Argentina. It is rarely found in New England, having visited the waste dump of a nineteenth-century wool carding factory in Maine.
Habitat
Anthropogenic (man-made or disturbed habitats)
New England distribution
Adapted from BONAP data
Native: indigenous.
Non-native: introduced (intentionally or unintentionally); has become naturalized.
County documented: documented to exist in the county by evidence (herbarium specimen, photograph). Also covers those considered historical (not seen in 20 years).
State documented: documented to exist in the state, but not documented to a county within the state. Also covers those considered historical (not seen in 20 years).
Note: when native and non-native populations both exist in a county, only native status is shown on the map.
Found this plant? Take a photo and post a sighting.
Characteristics
- Habitat
- terrestrial
- New England state
- Maine
- Leaf blade width
- 0.5–1.5 mm
- Inflorescence branches
- the flowers are attached to branches rather than to the main axis of the inflorescence
- Spikelet length
- 3.5–5 mm
- Awn on glume
- the glume has no awn
- One or more florets
-
- there is more than one floret per spikelet
- there is one floret per spikelet
- Lemma awn length
- Up to 2 mm
- Leaf ligule length
- 0.1–0.2 mm
-
Flowers
- Anther number
- 3
- Awn on glume
- the glume has no awn
- Floret lower bract texture
- the lemma is thin and flexible
- Floret types within spikelet
- there are at least two distinct forms of florets within one spikelet
- Glume veins
- 1
- Inflorescence arrangement
- the spikelets are uniform
- Inflorescence axis orientation
-
- the inflorescence axis bends downwards or hangs
- the inflorescence axis is arched or curved outward
- the inflorescence axis is straight
- Inflorescence branches
- the flowers are attached to branches rather than to the main axis of the inflorescence
- Inflorescence type (general)
- the spikelets are borne on stalks or on branches
- Inflorescence type (specific)
- the inflorescence is branched and the branches all grow from the same side of the plant and look like spikes
- Lemma awn base
- the awn is attached right at the tip of the lemma
- Lemma awn coiled
- the lemma awn is straight or twisted, but not coiled one half turn
- Lemma awn length
- Up to 2 mm
- Lemma awn number
- the lemma has more than one awn on it
- Lemma surface
- the surface of the lemma is relatively smooth (not counting any longitudinal veins or hairs)
- Lemma tip
-
- the lemma tip is a simple point, with or without an awn (long narrow extension ending in a point)
- the lemma tip is split into two or more points
- One or more florets
-
- there is more than one floret per spikelet
- there is one floret per spikelet
- Palea relative length
- palea is one half to fully as long as lemma
- Spikelet axis tip
- there is no extension of the spikelet axis beyond the tip of the spikelet
- Spikelet disintegration
- the spikelet breaks off above the glumes, so that after the florets fall off, the glumes remain
- Spikelet length
- 3.5–5 mm
- Spikelets spiny
- the spikelets do not appear spiny
-
Growth form
- Horizontal rooting stem
- no
- Lifespan
- the plant lives only a single year or less
- Rhizomes
- no
- Roots
- there are only slender roots on the plant
-
Leaves
- Leaf auricles
- the leaves do not have auricles
- Leaf blade width
- 0.5–1.5 mm
- Leaf ligule length
- 0.1–0.2 mm
- Leaf ligule type
- the leaf ligule is in the form of fine hairs
- Leaf sheath closed around stem
- the margins of the leaf sheath are overlapping and not fused together except in the basal half (or less)
-
Place
- Habitat
- terrestrial
- New England state
- Maine
- Specific habitat
- man-made or disturbed habitats
-
Stem, shoot, branch
- Stem spacing
- the stems grow close together in compact clusters or tufts
Wetland status
Not classified
In New England
Distribution
- Connecticut
- absent
- Maine
- present
- Massachusetts
- absent
- New Hampshire
- absent
- Rhode Island
- absent
- Vermont
- absent
Conservation status
None
From Flora Novae Angliae dichotomous key
5. Bouteloua simplex Lag. E
mat grama. Chondrosum prostratum (Lag.) Sweet • ME. Wool waste, disturbed ground.
Native to North America?
Yes and no (some introduced)
Sometimes confused with
- Bouteloua gracilis:
- upper glumes often with pustulose-based hairs on the midvein and plants perennial, often with rhizomes or stolons (vs. B. simplex, with upper glumes glabrous, sometimes scabrous distally and plant annual, without rhizomes or stolons).
Synonyms
- Chondrosum prostratum (Lag.) Sweet