Culms 35-65 cm, slender, stiffly erect, rarely geniculate; lower nodes
shortly hairy, hairs shorter than 3 mm, usually off-white and ascending; upper
nodes glabrous or glabrate. Leaves mostly basal, glaucous; ligules
1-1.5 mm; blades 10-25 cm long, 1-2(3.5) mm wide, flat to rolled, with
3-7 mm hairs below the middle. Panicles 6-12 cm, loose, fan-shaped; rachises
shorter than 5 cm, with 3-6 branches; branches longer than the rachises,
not rebranched, with 1 rame; rame internodes with 3-5 mm marginal hairs.
Sessile spikelets 5-8 mm, lanceolate; lower glumes 5.5-7 mm, glabrous,
shiny, with a deep dorsal pit, tapering to a narrow, slightly bifid apex; awns
20-28 mm; anthers 0.5-1 mm. Pedicellate spikelets 2.5-3.5 mm, sterile.
2n = 60.
Bothriochloa edwardsiana grows in the rocky plains and prairies of the
Edwards Plateau of Texas, on calcareous soil, at 300-600 m. It also grows in northern
Mexico and Uruguay. It resembles B. hybrida in some respects, but that species has a more robust habit, predominantly
cauline foliage, and wider leaf blades.