- Neostapfia
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Neostapfia Conservation status Scientific classification Kingdom: Plantae (unranked): Angiosperms (unranked): Monocots (unranked): Commelinids Order: Poales Family: Poaceae Subfamily: Chloridoideae Genus: Neostapfia Species: N. colusana Binomial name Neostapfia colusana
Burtt DavySynonyms Stapfia colusana
Anthochloa colusana
Davyella colusanaNeostapfia is a monotypic genus containing the single species of grass Neostapfia colusana, which is known by the common name Colusa grass.
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Distribution
It is endemic to the Central Valley of California, where it grows in vernal pools. This rare grass is a federally listed threatened species in the United States.
Description
Colusa grass is a clumping bunchgrass with distinctive cylindrical inflorescences covered in flat spikelets. The inflorescences are said to resemble tiny ears of corn. They fruit in grains covered in a gluey secretion, and when a plant is mature each clump becomes brown and sticky with the exudate. The genus was named for the botanist Otto Stapf.
The plant is limited to vernal pool habitat, a type of ecosystem which is increasingly rare as land is consumed by development and agriculture, and damaged by flood control regimes and other alteration in hydrology.[1]
References
External links
- Jepson Manual Treatment - Neostapfia
- USDA Plants Profile: Neostapfia
- The Nature Conservancy
- Grass Manual Profile: Neostapfia
- Neostapfia - Photo gallery
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