Plants perennial; usually stoloniferous. Culms
to 300 cm, erect. Sheaths glabrous or scabrous, often ciliate apically;
ligules ciliate; blades to 30 cm long, 15 mm wide, scabrous. Panicles
digitate, with 9-30 evidently distinct branches; branches 8-20 cm, usually
somewhat divaricate, spikelet-bearing to the base, averaging 10 spikelets per
cm. Spikelets strongly imbricate, tawny, with 1 bisexual and (1)2-4 usually
staminate, sometimes sterile florets. Lower glumes 1.4-2.8 mm; upper
glumes 2.2-3.5 mm; lowest lemmas 2.5-4.2 mm long, 0.7-1 mm wide,
ovate to obovate or elliptic, somewhat gibbous, sides not grooved, pubescence
variable, sides usually glabrous, sometimes scabrous or appressed pubescent,
margins usually glabrous or appressed pubescent on the lower portions, sometimes
throughout their length, sometimes with strongly divergent hairs distally, occasionally
with strongly divergent hairs their entire length, divergent hairs, when present,
1+ mm, lemma apices inconspicuously bilobed, awned, awns 1.5-6.5 mm; second
florets staminate or sterile, 2.2-3.2 mm long, 0.3-1 mm wide, similar to
the first floret but more cylindrical, not widened distally, inflated, if at
all, only near the apices, inconspicuously bilobed, awned, awns 0.8-3.2 mm;
distal florets progressively smaller, longer than the subtending rachilla
segment, awn-tipped or unawned. Caryopses 1-1.5 mm long, about 0.5 mm
wide. 2n = 20, 30, 40.
Chloris gayana grows in warm-temperate to tropical regions throughout
the world, including the southern United States. It is cultivated as a meadow
grass in irrigated regions of the southwest.