Plants annual. Culms 1-3(4) m tall, 1-4 cm thick, unbranched in
dense stands, abundantly branched in open areas. Blades 20-80 cm long,
3-8 cm wide, glabrous. Pistillate inflorescences 1-many per node, usually
in dense, sheathed, axillary clusters; peduncles usually (0)1-8 cm, slender
and not exceeding the leaf sheaths, occasionally 1(2) peduncles as long as 23
cm and exceeding the leaf sheaths; pistillate rames distichous, 6-9 cm,
subtended by a sheath, with 5-9 solitary spikelets; fruitcases trapezoidal
in side view, 7-11.5 mm on the long side, 3.7-6.5 mm on the short side, 3-5
mm in diameter. Caryopses concealed. Terminal staminate panicles
12-24 cm, with (4)10-28 stiffly ascending branches; branches 7-16(21)
cm, internodes 3-6 mm; pedicels 3-5 mm; spikelets 4.6-12 mm, densely
imbricate; lower glumes flat dorsally, stiff, not translucent, margins
tightly enclosing the upper glumes, (9)12-20(28)-veined, the 2 sublateral veins
prominent, keeled, ciliate, narrowly winged distally. 2n = 20.
Zea luxurians is endemic to Central America, growing from Guatemala to
Honduras, at elevations of 600-1200 m, and may extend into Oaxaca, Mexico. It
was frequently grown for forage about a century ago, and is still sometimes grown
for this purpose in the southern United States. It hardly ever tillers in the
wild, but forms as many as 50 tillers in favorable agricultural settings and longer
day lengths than in its native range. Although it can hybridize with Z. mays subsp. mays, Z. luxurians
rarely does so in the wild.