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

Sporobolus floridanus

Sporobolus floridanus Chapm.  
Family: Poaceae
Florida Dropseed
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
  • FNA
  • Resources
Paul M. Peterson, Stephan L. Hatch, Alan S. Weakley. Flora of North America

Plants perennial; cespitose, not rhizomatous. Culms (40)100-200(250) cm. Sheaths shiny and indurate basally, glabrous or appressed hairy elsewhere, hairs to 5 mm; ligules 0.2-0.7 mm; blades (10)25-50 cm long, (2)3-10 mm wide, flat to folded, pale bluish-green, yellowing at maturity, glabrous on both surfaces or the adaxial surface sparsely hairy basally, margins scabridulous. Panicles (18)30-50 cm long, 4-15 cm wide, open (contracted when immature), longer than wide, not diffuse, pyramidal to ovate; lower nodes with 1-2(3) branches; primary branches 4-15 cm, spreading 10-90° from the rachis, not capillary, without spikelets on the lower 1/3; secondary branches spreading; pulvini hairy or glabrous; pedicels 2-14 mm, longer than the spikelets, spreading, glabrous, sometimes scabridulous. Spikelets (3.7)4-6 mm, purplish-brown. Glumes linear-lanceolate, membranous; lower glumes 2.5-5.1 mm, (0.6)0.75-0.9(0.94) times as long as the upper glumes; upper glumes 3.7-5.7 mm, longer than the florets; lemmas 3-4 mm, ovate to lanceolate, membranous, glabrous, acute; paleas 3-4 mm, ovate, membranous, glabrous; anthers 2-3.1 mm, purplish. Fruits 1.7-2 mm, fusiform, reddish-brown. 2n = unknown.

Sporobolus floridanus grows in wet to mesic pine woodlands, seepage bogs, and treeless swales, in soils semi-permanently to seasonally saturated at the surface, and in places where water may pond for weeks, at elevations of 0-100 m. It is endemic to the southeastern United States.

Sporobolus floridanus
Open Interactive Map
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus image
Sporobolus floridanus image
University of Florida Herbarium
Sporobolus floridanus 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.