Festuca idahoensisElmer (redirected from: Festuca ingrata (Hack. ex Beal) Rydb.)
Family: Poaceae
Bluebunch Fescue, more...Idaho fescue, Blue Bunchgrass
[Festuca idahoensis var. oregona (Hack. ex Beal) C.L. Hitchc., moreFestuca ingrata (Hack. ex Beal) Rydb., Festuca ingrata var. ingrata (Hack. ex Beal) Rydb., Festuca occidentalis var. ingrata (Hack. ex Beal) Boivin, Festuca occidentalis var. oregona (Hack.) Boivin, Festuca ovina var. columbiana Beal, Festuca ovina var. ingrata Hack. ex Beal, Festuca ovina var. oregona Hack. ex Beal]
FNA 2007, USDA,Utah Flora 1983, Field Guide to Forest & Mtn. Plants of N AZ 2009
Common Name: Idaho fescue Duration: Perennial Nativity: Native Lifeform: Graminoid General: Cool-season perennial, stems 25-85 cm tall, with sparse, narrow, basal leaves that have a bluish green hue, and with a narrow, dense panicle. Vegetative: Densely cespitose, blades 5-35 cm long, < 2 mm wide, rolled, with 3-5 well-defined ribs; sheaths closed for less than half their length, smooth or scabrous; ligules < 1 mm; Inflorescence: Panicle 7-15 cm long, loosely contractd, 1-2 branches per node; branches sometimes erect, lower branches usually spreading somewhat, lower branches have 2 or more spikelets; spikelets 7-13 mm long, with 4-7 florets; glumes are exceeded by the upper florets, 2-6 mm long, mostly smooth; lemmas 5-8 mm long, rounded, scabrous near tip, with awns 3-6 mm long; anthers 2-4 mm long. Ecology: Found in grasslands, sagebrush meadows, rocky slopes, and open forests up to 6000-10,000 ft. (1800-3000 m); flowers July-August. Distribution: All western states and South Dakota Ethnobotany: Culms were tied together and used as a brush to clean metates. Is used as forage for domestic livestock. Etymology: Festuca is Latin for a grass stalk or straw, while idahoensis refers to it being from the state of Idaho. Editor: LKearsley, 2012