Plants annual. Culms to 100 cm, erect, succulent, glabrous, branching
from the lower nodes. Sheaths glabrous or hispid with papillose-based hairs;
ligules absent or the ligule region pubescent; blades 10-35 cm long,
5-10 mm wide. Panicles 15-30 cm, narrow; primary branches appressed
to ascending, with papillose-based hairs at the base of the spikelets. Spikelets
4-5 mm, disarticulating at maturity. Glumes with hairs over the veins,
glabrous, scabrous, or hispid between the veins; upper glumes about equal
to the spikelets, muticous or awned, awns to 1 mm; lower florets sterile;
lower lemmas unawned or awned, awns 8-16(50) mm; lower paleas absent
or hyaline and subequal to the lemmas; upper lemmas 4-4.5 mm long, 1.7-1.9
mm wide, elliptic; anthers 0.5-0.7 mm, purple. Caryopses2.7-2.9
mm long, 1.7-1.8 mm wide, elliptic in outline, mucronate; embryos about
75% as long as the caryopses; hila obovate. 2n = unknown.
Echinochloa oplismenoides was first found in the United States, in southern
Arizona, in 1993 (Fishbein 1995). It was previously known only from Mexico, with
a range that extends from northwestern Mexico to Guatemala. The southern Arizonan
plants were found near a cattle tank in wet grasslands. Fishbein stated that it
was impossible to tell whether they represented a previously overlooked native
species or an introduction.