Bromus interruptus

Bromus interruptus

Taxobox
name = "Bromus interruptus"


image_width = 200px
image_caption = "Bromus interruptus" flowering spike with sainfoin flowering in the background
status = EW
status_ref=citation| title=UK Biodiversity Group Tranche 2 Action Plans| volume=1: Vertebrates and vascular plants| year=1998| page=133| url=http://www.ukbap.org.uk/UKPlans.aspx?ID=162#8]
regnum = Plantae
divisio = Magnoliophyta
classis = Liliopsida
ordo = Poales
familia = Poaceae
genus = "Bromus"
species = "B. interruptus"
binomial = "Bromus interruptus"
binomial_authority = (Hack.) Druce
synonyms ="Bromus mollis" var. "interruptus" Hack.

"Bromus interruptus", commonly known as the interrupted brome, is a plant in the true grass family. It is endemic to southern and central England, but is believed to have been extinct in the wild since 1972. After several decades in cultivation, the interrupted brome was re-introduced to a reserve in Aston Rowant in 2004, marking the first known re-introduction of an extinct plant in Britain. The plant was a weed of waste places and arable agriculture, particularly of sainfoin ("Onobrychis viciifolia") cultivation. It can be distinguished from all other "Bromus" species by its deeply split, or bifid, palea.

The plant appeared to spread rapidly after its discovery in 1849, which is normally indicative of introduced species. However, the species is thought to have arisen in the 19th century as a new species through a substantial and abrupt genetic change. It is thought to have gone into decline with the replacement of horses by motor vehicles from the late 19th century onwards, reducing the demand for sainfoin as fodder, and additionally by improved seed cleaning methods.

Description

"Bromus interruptus" is an annual or biennial herb. Its slender to somewhat stout s measure 20 to 100 cm and occur as either loosely tufted or solitary. They are erect, very lightly pubescent, unbranched and contain 2 to 4 nodes. The green leaves measure 6 to 20 cm long by 2 to 6 mm wide and are long-linear in shape with a pointed apex. They are covered in a soft pubescence. The leaf sheaths are tubular with the lower portion having a soft pubescence replaced by shorter hairs in the upper portion. The ligules measure 1 to 2 mm and are membranous and toothed.

The inflorescence is a dense, oblong panicle that measures 2 to 9 cm in length and up to 20 mm thick. It is erect, greyish green in colour and, as the name suggests, usually interrupted, sometimes even reduced to a single spikelet. Its branches measure up to 15 mm in length. The sessile (i.e. without a stalk) or nearly sessile spikelets occur in dense clusters with each measuring 10 to 15 mm long by 5 to 8 mm broad. They are covered in soft pubescence and are plump with a broadly ovate (i.e. egg-shaped) to broadly oblong shape. Each contains 5 to 11 flowers and they slowly break up beneath each lemma once mature.

The glumes, or sterile husks at the base of each spikelet, are unequal in morphology and persist after maturity. Both the upper and lower glumes may have apices ranging from blunt to abruptly pointed. The lower glume is 5 to 7 mm long with 3 to 7 veins and an oblong to elliptical outline. The upper one is slightly larger, measuring 6 to 9 mm long with 5 to 9 veins and an ovate to broadly elliptical shape. The lemmas, the outer of the two husks enclosing a flower, measure 7.5 to 9 mm long by 5 to 5.5 mm wide and have an obovate to obovate-elliptic outline. They have 7 to 9 prominent veins, 2 very small teeth, and membranous margins that are more flexible than the otherwise firm centre. Each lemma has a fine, rough awn that measures 4 to 8 mm and may be either be straight or bending. The paleas, the upper of the two husks that enclose a flower, are narrowly elliptical in outline and are shorter than the lemmas. They are bifid (i.e. split in two) to the base with the split keel being somewhat pubescent. The bifid paleas distinguish the interrupted brome from all other species in the genus. [citation| last=Hubbard| first=CE| year=1954| title=Grasses, a guide to their structure, identification, uses and distribution in the British Isles| publisher=Penguin Books] Each spikelet contains 5 to 8 flowers. The anthers are 1 to 1.5 mm long. The caryopsis is tightly enclosed and is narrowly ellipsoid in outline. The chromosome number is 2n=28.

Distribution and habitat

The interrupted brome is endemic to south-central and southeastern England and was formerly found from southern Lincolnshire south to eastern Kent and northern Somerset. It was last seen in the wild in Cambridgeshire in 1972 and is currently classified as extinct in the wild. Its demise is thought to have been due to improved seed cleaning methods, which effectively eradicated the species as a weed of crops. Since that time the plant has persisted in cultivation in the United Kingdom. It has also been introduced to the Netherlands, where it is now established.

The plant was found primarily in waste places and as a weed in arable crops, particularly sainfoin ("Onobrychis viciifolia"), rye grass ("Lolium perenne") and clover ("Trifolium sp."). It was also found on the sides of roads and tracks.citation| last=Sell| first=Peter; Murrell, Gina| title=Flora of Great Britain and Ireland| volume=5| page=205| year=1996| ISBN=0 521 55339 3]

Re-introduction

The late Philip M. Smith (1941-2004), a botanist specialising in brome grasses from the University of Edinburgh, collected seeds in the 1970's from the last population of the interrupted brome in Cambridge. He germinated the seeds and grew the plants in a pot on his window sill. In 1979 at a Botanical Society of the British Isles conference he presented seeds to several of his colleagues. Through him the plants began to be cultivated at the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew and Edinburgh.citation| last=Randall| first=David| title=Back from the dead: scientist revives lost plant of old England| newspaper=The Independent on Sunday| date=24 July 2005| url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4159/is_20050724/ai_n14806373]

Stewart Henchie, a botanist from Kew Gardens, began a project to re-introduce the interrupted brome into the wild. Under his leadership, Kew Gardens and Paignton Zoo grew large quantities of the plants to procure seeds for an eventual re-introduction. In the summer of 2004, these seeds were dispersed at English Nature's reserve at Aston Rowant in the Chilterns. The plants successfully germinated, fruited and persisted. This marked the first extinct plant to be re-introduced into the wild in British history.

References


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