Plants perennial; usually sprawling , occasionally cespitose. Culms
30-110 cm, decumbent and rooting at the lower nodes; nodes glabrous. Sheaths
glabrous; ligules 1-2.3 mm; blades to 50 cm long, 2-10 mm wide,
flat, glabrous or pubescent. Panicles terminal, with 2-6(10) racemosely
arranged branches; branches 3.5-12.5 cm, diverging to erect; branch
axes 1-2.1 mm wide, glabrous, terminating in a spikelet. Spikelets
2.5-3 mm long, 1.3-1.6 mm wide, paired, appressed to the branch axes, elliptic,
light brown. Lower glumes often present, 0.5-2 mm, brown; upper glumes
glabrous, 5-veined, margins entire, lower lemmas glabrous, 5-7-veined,
margins entire; upper florets olive, golden brown, or dark brown. Caryopses
1.6-1.8 mm, brown. 2n = 20, 30, 40.
Paspalum modestum grows in wet roadside ditches and rice fields
of Texas and southern Louisiana. It was introduced to the United States
from South America. Plants with pale florets may key to P.
lividum, which
differs from P. modestum in having shorter ligules.
Until recently, plants belonging to Paspalum modestum have been
called P. hydrophilum Henrard in North America, but experimental
studies have shown that the two species are quite distinct and that North
American plants belong to P. modestum.