Plants rhizomatous, frequently also stoloniferous. Culms
(50)100-300 cm, to about 1 cm thick, sometimes branching above the base; nodes
glabrous. Leaves primarily cauline; sheaths often much wider than
the internodes, mostly glabrous but the collars pubescent, lower sheaths compressed;
ligules 0.5-2.9 mm, ciliolate; blades 15-50 cm long, (5)20-35
mm wide, bases usually wider than the sheaths. Panicles terminal and
axillary, 10-50 cm overall, rachises 2-3.5 cm, with 30-100+ branches; lower
branches 10-24 cm, frequently fascicled. Spikelets 2.1-2.7 mm, ovoid
to oblong-ellipsoid, acute or apiculate; upper glumes and lower lemmas
usually 5-veined, sparsely pilose; upper florets 0-0.4 mm shorter than
the upper glumes and lower lemmas, obtuse to subacute. Caryopses usually
absent. 2n = 20.
Axonopus scoparius is native from southern Mexico to Peru, Bolivia, and
Brazil. In Mesoamerica, it rarely sets seed but is grown for forage and often
persists after cultivation has ceased. It has been grown experimentally in Florida,
but it is not winter hardy even there. Not surprisingly, A. scoparius is
not established in the Flora region.