Skip Navigation
Sign In
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Chicago Botanic Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Denver Botanic Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Desert Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • NY Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Sitemap

Tripsacum dactyloides

Tripsacum dactyloides (L.) L.  
Family: Poaceae
Eastern Mock Grama, more...Eastern Gamagrass (es: zacate maiz)
[Coix angulata Mill., moreCoix dactyloides L., Ischaemum glabrum Walter, Tripsacum dactyloides f. prolificum R.S. Dayton & Dewald, Tripsacum dactyloides var. angustifolium Scribn., nom. nud., Tripsacum dactyloides var. floridanum , Tripsacum dactyloides var. monostachyon (Willd.) Eaton & J. Wright, Tripsacum dactyloides var. monostachyum (Willd.) Hack., Tripsacum dactyloides var. occidentale H.C.Cutler & E.S.Anderson, Tripsacum monostachyon Willd.]
Tripsacum dactyloides image
John Hilty
  • FNA
  • vPlants
  • Gleason & Cronquist
  • Indiana Flora
  • Resources
Mary E. Barkworth. Flora of North America

Plants with short, knotty rhizomes. Culms 1-2(4) m tall, 3-5 mm thick, clumped. Sheaths usually glabrous, occasionally slightly pilose; ligules ciliate; blades 30-75(120) cm long, 9-35(45) mm wide, flat, usually glabrous, tapering to attenuate apices. Terminal inflorescences erect, with (1)2-3(6) rames; rames 12-25 cm. Pistillate spikelets 6-8 mm long, 3-5.5 mm wide. Staminate spikelets all sessile or subsessile; glumes 5-12 mm, coriaceous, blunt, acute, or bifid; pedicels, when present, about 1 mm long, 0.5-0.8 mm wide, triangular in cross section, rigid. 2n = 36, 54, 72.

Tripsacum dactyloides grows in water courses and limestone outcrops from the central and eastern United States through Mexico to northern South America. Plants from the United States and northern Mexico belong to Tripsacum dactyloides (L.) L. var. dactyloides. They differ from those of the other two varieties in their erect stems and sessile staminate spikelets. Narrow-bladed plants of T. dactyloides from Texas resemble T. floridanum, but on transplanting to favorable conditions develop the wider blades characteristic of T. dactyloides. The two species can hybridize; the hybrids are partially sterile.

Growing Tripsacum dactyloides for forage has proven practical only in South America. It is also used as an ornamental grass, the chief attraction being its foliage.

The Morton Arboretum
Perennial herb with short, knotty rhizomes 1 - 4.25 m tall Leaves: with an open, often hairless sheath and membranous ligules lined with hairs along the margins. The blades are 30 cm - 1.2 m long, 0.9 - 4.5 cm wide, flat with a pointed tip, and often hairless. Inflorescence: terminal and axillary, branched (panicle), the terminal inflorescence erect with one to six spikes 12 - 25 cm long. Fruit: a caryopsis. Culm: clumped, 1 - 4 m long, 3 - 5 mm across. Spikelets: either stalkless or stalked, with female spikelets beneath the male spikelets in the same inflorescence. The male spikelets are paired and stalkless or nearly so, and the female spikelets are not paired, 6 - 8 mm long, and 3 - 5.5 mm wide. Glumes: of male spikelets are 5 - 12 mm long, leather-like, blunt, pointed or cleft at the tip. Female spikelets have leather-like lower glumes that cover the florets and upper glumes that are similar but smaller. Florets: having transparent, unawned lemmas and paleas. Lower florets of female spikelets are sterile.

Similar species: No information at this time.

Flowering: May to September

Habitat and ecology: Rare in the Chicago region, growing in railroad ballast.

Occurence in the Chicago region: native

Etymology: Tripsacum is of unknown origin. Dactyloides means "with fingers."

Author: The Morton Arboretum

Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Culms 1-3 m, in large clumps from thick rhizomes; blades elongate, often to 2 cm wide; spikes 1-4, 10-25 cm, the lower fourth or third pistillate; spikelets 7-10 mm; first glume of the pistillate spikelets toward the outside of the pit, indurate, ovate, acute; both staminate spikelets of a pair sessile or subsessile, the outer glumes oblong; 2n=18, 36, 45, 54, 72, 90, 108. Swamps and wet soil; trop. Amer., n. in e. and c. U.S. to Mass., s. Mich. (only casual), Io., and Nebr.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
From Flora of Indiana (1940) by Charles C. Deam
I have found this species only twice. A few colonies were in a low, wet woods about three fourths of a mile southeast of the old Spencer School, about 10 miles southwest of Mt. Vernon, Posey County; and it was common along a ditch through a low field about 5 miles east of Lincoln City, Spencer County. I moved two colonies to Bluffton 6 years ago, and they are hardy and spreading.

……

Indiana Coefficient of Conservatism: C = 2

Wetland Indicator Status: FAC

Tripsacum dactyloides
Open Interactive Map
Tripsacum dactyloides image
John Hilty
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Sue Carnahan
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Sue Carnahan
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Steve Hurst
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Tripsacum dactyloides image
Click to Display
100 Initial Media
- - - - -
View All Media
Institute for Museum and Library Services KU BI Logo Logo for the Biodiversity Knowledge Integration Center

This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].

EcoFlora is part of the SEINet Portal Network. Learn more here.

Powered by Symbiota.