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

Alopecurus borealis

Alopecurus borealis Trin.  
Family: Poaceae
Alpine Foxtail, more...Boreal Foxtail, Vulpin Alpin, Vulpin Boréale
Alopecurus borealis image
  • FNA
  • Resources
William J. Crins. Flora of North America

Plants perennial; shortly rhizomatous. Culms (6)10-80 cm, erect or decumbent. Ligules 1-2 mm, truncate; blades 4-22 cm long, 2.5-7 mm wide; upper sheaths inflated. Panicles 1-5 cm long, 8-14 mm wide. Glumes 3-5 mm, connate at the base, membranous, densely pilose throughout, keels not winged, ciliate, apices acute and parallel; lemmas 2.5-4.5 mm, connate at the base, glabrous below, finely pubescent apically, apices usually obtuse, occasionally truncate, awns 2-6(8) mm, geniculate, exceeding the lemmas by 0-5 mm; anthers 2.3-3 mm, yellow. Caryopses 0.7-2 mm. 2n = 98, 100, 105, 112, 117, 119, ca. 120.

Alopecurus borealis has an arctic-alpine to subalpine circumpolardistribution, but it has not been found in Scandinavia or Iceland. It grows primarily in wet soils in tundra, meadows, along streams, shorelines, gravelbars, and floodplains, and occasionally in somewhat drier forest openings, in fine or silty to stony soils or moss. It is sometimes co-dominant with Dupontia fisheri in the arctic and subarctic portion of its range. The anthocyanic tint of the plant as a whole greatly increases to the north.

The morphological variability in Alopecurus borealis has prompted recognition of several segregate taxa. Alopecurus stejnegeri Vasey and A. occidentalis Scribn. & Tweedy are two of the more conspicuous extremes. The former are small plants occurring on enriched sites in the Arctic, usually around sea bird or seal colonies where high nutrient levels produce lush vegetative growth; the latter refers to tall-stemmed plants found in the Rocky Mountains. Because such plants are simply extremes in a continuum of variation, they do not merit taxonomic recognition.

Alopecurus borealis is listed in many floras as A. alpinus Sm., a name that had previously been applied to another species. The correct name is A. borealis.

Alopecurus borealis
Open Interactive Map
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis image
Alopecurus borealis 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.