| Kelly W. Allred |
Plants perennial; often dioecious or monoecious; cespitose.
Culms 2-7 m, erect, densely clumped. Leaves primarily basal; sheaths
open, often overlapping, glabrous or hairy; auricles absent; ligules
of hairs; blades to 2 m, flat to folded, arching, edges usually sharply
serrate. Inflorescences terminal, plumose panicles, 30-130 cm, subtended
by a long, ciliate bract; branches stiff to flexible. Spikelets
somewhat laterally compressed, usually unisexual, sometimes bisexual, with 2-9
unisexual florets; disarticulation above the glumes and below the florets.
Glumes unequal, nearly as long as the spikelets, hyaline, 1-veined; calluses
pilose; lemmas 3-5(7)-veined, long-acuminate, bifid and awned or entire
and mucronate; lemmas of pistillate and bisexual florets usually
long-sericeous; lemmas of staminate florets less hairy or glabrous; lodicules
2, cuneate and irregularly lobed, ciliate; paleas about 1/2 as long as
the lemmas, 2-veined; anthers of bisexual florets 3, 1.5-6 mm, those
of the pistillate florets smaller or absent. Caryopses 1.5-3 mm; hila
linear, about 1/2 as long as the caryopses; embryos usually shorter than
1 mm. x = 9. Name from the Spanish, cortada, cutting, referring
to the sharply serrate blades.
Cortaderia, a genus of 24-25 species, is native to South America and
New Zealand, with the majority of species being South American. Recent evidence
suggests that the species in the two regions represent different lineages, each
of which merits generic recognition. The species treated here would remain in
Cortaderia if this change were made.
Both of the species that are found in North America were originally introduced
as ornamental species; both are now considered aggressive weeds in parts of
the Flora region.
A reference has been added.
1 |
Sheaths hairy;
panicles elevated well above the foliage; culms 4-5 times as long as the
panicles ..... 1. C. jubata |
Sheaths glabrous or sparsely hairy;
panicles elevated only slightly, if at all, above the foliage; culms 2-4
times as long as the panicles ..... 2. C.
selloana |
1. Cortaderia jubata (Lemoine ex
Carrière) Stapf
Purple Pampas Grass
Plants pistillate (in North America). Culms 2-7
m, 4-7 times as long as the panicles. Leaves primarily basal; sheaths
hairy, sometimes densely so; ligules 1-2 mm; blades 1 m long or
longer, 2-10 cm wide, mostly flat, often horizontal, dark green, abaxial surfaces
hairy near the base. Panicles 30-100 cm, elevated well above the basal
foliage, deep violet when young. Spikelets 14-16 mm, pistillate; florets readily
disarticulating; calluses about 0.6 mm; lemmas about 10 mm, long-attenuate
to an awn, awns to 1 mm; paleas to 4 mm, keels ciliate, apical hairs
extending beyond the body of the paleas; stigmas usually not exserted.
Caryopses to 2.5 mm; embryos to 1 mm. 2n = 108.
Cortaderia jubata is found on the west coast of the coterminus United
States, growing in disturbed, open ground such as brushy slopes, eroded banks
and cliffs, road cuts, cut-over timber areas, and sand dunes. It is native to
mountainous areas of Bolivia, Peru, and Ecuador. It was grown in the past as
an ornamental because of its attractive panicles, but is now a serious weed
in California, reproducing apomictically and invading many open habitats. It
was mistakenly called Cortaderia rudiuscula Stapf by Hitchcock (1951).
The florets of C. rudiuscula differ from those of C. jubata in
being longer and narrower, having shorter, less hairy calluses, and in having
no hairs that extend beyond the top of the palea. Cortaderia rudiuscula
is not known from North America.
2. Cortaderia selloana (Schult. & Schult. f.) Asch. & Graebn.
Pampas Grass
Plants usually dioecious, sometimes monoecious. Culms 2-4 m, usually
2-4 times as long as the panicles. Leaves primarily basal; sheaths
mostly glabrous, with a dense tuft of hairs at the collars; ligules 1-2
mm; blades to 2 m long, 3-8 cm wide, mostly flat, cauline, ascending, arching,
bluish-green, abaxial surfaces glabrous basally. Panicles 30-130 cm, only
slightly, if at all, elevated above the foliage, whitish or pinkish when young.
Spikelets 15-17 mm; calluses to 1 mm, with hairs to 2 mm; lemmas
long-attenuate to an awn, awns 2.5-5 mm; paleas to 4 mm; stigmas
exserted. Caryopses and florets not separating easily from the rachilla.
2n = 72.
Cortaderia selloana is native to central South America. It is cultivated
as an ornamental in the warmer parts of North America. It was thought that it
would not become a weed problem because most plants sold as ornamentals are unisexual,
but it is now considered an aggressive weed in California and Bendigo, Australia.
The weedy Australian plants are bisexual (Walsh 1994).