Culms (10)15-30(42) cm, disarticulating at the nodes at maturity. Sheaths
usually densely pilose, hairs sometimes papillose-based (upper sheaths sometimes
glabrous); blades 3-8(20) cm long, 1-3 mm wide, both surfaces sparsely
to densely pilose, sometimes also scabrous or hirsute (rarely glabrous). Inflorescences
with 1-2(3) spikelets, if more than 1, racemose; pedicels stiff, appressed,
shorter than the spikelets. Spikelets (8)12-26 mm. Calluses of middle
florets longer than wide, concave abaxially; lemma bodies 5.5-11 mm,
glabrous over the back (rarely with a few scattered hairs), margins pilose (rarely
glabrous), apical teeth 1.5-7 mm, acute to aristate; awns 5.5-13 mm; anthers
to 3.5 mm. Caryopses 2.2-4 mm long, about 1 mm wide. 2n = 36.
Danthonia unispicata is restricted to western North America, where
it grows in prairies and meadows, on rocky slopes, and in dry openings
up to timberline in the mountains. It differs from D.
californica in its shorter stature, usually densely pilose foliage,
short, erect pedicels, and the usually erect cauline leaf blades. It is
closely related to D. californica,
and some authors prefer to treat it as Danthonia californica var. unispicata
Thurb.