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Key to Digitaria
Poaceae
Digitaria
https://fsus.ncbg.unc.edu/main.php?pg=show-key.php&keyid=39760
(c) Steven, Daniel - C, permission granted to NCBG
(c) Witsell, Theo - CC-BY-NC, permission granted to NCBG
1 Inflorescences digitate or sub-digitate, or with primary branches alternately arranged along a central axis; with (1) 2-3+ spikelets per node on primary branches, arranged in two rows along one side of the branch (and usually appressed on branches); the entire inflorescence not detaching at maturity.
(c) Horn, Jay
(c) Horn, Jay
© scallions
(c) Horn, Jay
(c) Bradley, Keith
(c) jlange - CC-BY-NC
© scallions
© scallions
16 Spikelets 1.2-1.7 mm long; lower glumes absent (or reduced to veinless, membranous rim); wings of the rachis at least ½ was wide or wider than the midribs
20 Plants never with axillary panicles concealed in the lower leaf sheaths; panicles bearing spikelets in unequally pedicellate pairs (at least on lower and middle portions of the inflorescence); leaf blades 1.5-2.5 mm wide; sheaths mostly glabrous, sometimes with long scattered hairs basally only if not entirely glabrous; [waif]
(c) Budach, Brett - CC-BY-NC, permission granted to NCBG
22 Spikelets variously pubescent, 2.0-3.6 mm long (only obscurely pubescent in D. simpsonii, but spikelets at least 3.0 mm long), the upper glumes ca. as long as the spikelets; ligules not fimbriate; blades pilose or hirsute (sometimes nearly glabrous in D. texana); plants usually decumbent and branching at lower nodes (D. simpsonii and D. texana) OR if the plants tufted and erect, then spikelets 2.4-2.8 mm long (D. subcalva).
24 Spikelets 2.4-2.8 mm long; primary inflorescence branches 2-4, the inflorescence lax, diffuse, and gray to purplish-gray; pedicels on upper paired spikelets longer (2.5-3.0 mm); leaf sheaths strongly papillose-hispid; [endemic to wet, fringing calcareous prairies, peninsular FL]
(c) Campos, Aidan
27 Spikelets 2.1-2.4; sheaths with scattered papillose-based hairs, ligules erose; the inflorescences with the lower most branches whorled (the upper branches paired or solitary; on depauperate inflorescences merely 2-3 branches opposite or whorled); [primarily c. and s. FL in our area, a waif in MS, AL, and SC]
28 Plants perennial and usually stoloniferous, sometimes also rhizomatous; culms erect or decumbent, not rooting at the lower nodes (except D. milanjiana which does or does not root); [uncommon non-natives].
29 Midveins of the lower lemmas smooth throughout; basal sheaths glabrous or often densely pubescent (the hairs 4-6 mm long); spikelets wooly pubescent, the hairs of variable length (sometimes > 1 mm long); rhizomes sometimes present, if so, these giving the plant bases a knotty appearance; [throughout FL]
28 Plants annual or nearly so, lacking stolons and never rhizomatous; culms erect but also often long-decumbent and usually rooting at the lower nodes; [natives and non-natives, collectively widespread].
© James Lange