Plants cespitose, eventually forming rather large clumps,
covered with prominent brown viscid glands at maturity. Culms 10-30 cm,
simple, ascending or decumbent, often geniculate, not breaking apart at the
nodes. Sheaths loosely enveloping the culms; blades 2-5 cm long,
5-12 mm wide. Spikes 2-8 cm long, 8-12 mm thick. Lower lemmas
about 5 mm long, about 3 mm wide, 7-11-veined; anthers about 2.5 mm.
Caryopses about 2.5 mm. 2n = 40.
Neostapfia colusana grows in vernal pools of Colusa, Merced, Solano,
and Stanislaus counties, California, at elevations below 125 m. It is listed
by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service as a threatened species because of its
restricted habitat, much of which has been destroyed. The stout, cylindrical
spikes emerging from the sheathing leaves resemble miniature ears of maize.
This and the abundant viscid secretion make N. colusana a particularly
distinctive species.