Plants annual; cespitose, without innovations, without glands. Culms
5-40 cm, erect, glabrous, occasionally with oblong glandular areas below the nodes.
Sheaths hairy on the distal margins and at the apices, hairs to 4 mm, stiff;
ligules 0.2-0.3 mm; blades 2-8 cm long, 2-4 mm wide, flat to involute,
abaxial surfaces smooth, adaxial surfaces scabridulous, bases occasionally with
papillose-based hairs. Panicles 4-15 cm long, 1-7 cm wide, cylindrical
to narrowly ovate, open, rachises sometimes glandular below the nodes; primary
branches 0.5-4 cm, diverging 20-100° from the rachises; pulvini
sparsely pilose; pedicels 1-4(7) mm, as long as or longer than the spikelets,
mostly pendent, lax, terete. Spikelets (1)1.5-2.5 mm long, 0.9-1.4 mm wide,
ovate to oblong, reddish-purple to greenish, with 4-8 florets; disarticulation
basipetal, glumes persistent. Glumes ovate, hyaline, keeled, veins commonly
green; lower glumes 0.4-0.7 mm; upper glumes 0.7-1 mm; lemmas
0.7-1.1 mm, ovate to broadly oblong, membranous, lateral veins usually greenish,
apices truncate to obtuse; paleas 0.6-1.1 mm, hyaline, keels ciliate, cilia
0.3-0.5 mm, apices obtuse to truncate; anthers 3, about 0.2 mm, purplish.
Caryopses 0.3-0.5 mm, ellipsoid, translucent, light brown. 2n
=
20.
Eragrostis amabilis
is native to the Eastern Hemisphere. It is now naturalized
in the southeastern United States, growing in open areas such as cultivated fields,
forest margins, and roadsides at 0-200 m.