Plants perennial; cespitose. Culms 70-100 cm, erect, mostly unbranched.
Leaves cauline; sheaths mostly longer than the internodes, mostly
glabrous, summit with hairs; collars mostly glabrous, sides usually with
straight or wrinkled hairs; ligules 0.2-0.3 mm; blades 30-55 cm
long, 1-2 mm wide, pale yellow-green, loosely involute, lax, glabrous abaxially,
with scattered hairs adaxially. Inflorescences paniculate, 30-45 cm long,
5-25 cm wide, oblong to ovate; primary branches single or paired, ascending
and somewhat lax to stiffly divergent, with weakly developed axillary pulvini,
spikelet-bearing to the base; lowermost branches to 15 cm. Spikelets
mostly appressed. Glumes purplish-tinged, 1-veined; lower glumes
10-14 mm; upper glumes 8-9 mm; calluses 0.5-0.7 mm; lemmas
8-12 mm, gray mottled with purple or dark patches, narrowing to a slightly curved
and twisted beak, junction with the awns not strongly marked; awns not
disarticulating at maturity; central awns 10-25 mm, falcate; lateral
awns absent; anthers 3, about 1 mm, brown. Caryopses 6-7 mm,
chestnut-colored. 2n = unknown.
Aristida floridana grows in waste places, along roadsides, and on railroad
embankments. It is rare in the United States, being known only from Key West
and Ramrod Key, Florida. It is more common in the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico,
where it intergrades with A. ternipes.