Glyceria septentrionalis Hitchc.
Family: Poaceae
Floating Manna Grass,  more...
[Glyceria texana Tzvelev,  more...]
Glyceria septentrionalis image
From Flora of Indiana (1940) by Charles C. Deam

Infrequent to somewhat frequent in the lake area and local in the southern part of the state. It has the habitat of the preceding species [Glyceria borealis], growing only in very wet places or in shallow water.

Culms 10-15 dm, rather soft, often decumbent and rooting from the lower nodes; main lvs 6-10 mm wide; ligule prominent; infl narrow, 2-4 dm, often somewhat spreading at anthesis; spikelets subsessile or short-pedicelled, 1-2 cm, 8-16-fld, the lemmas spreading at maturity; rachilla-joints 1.1-1.8 mm; glumes scarious, obscurely veined, elliptic to obovate, the first 1.9-3.9 mm, the second 2.8-5.1 mm; lemmas elliptic, 3.7-5.3 mm, dull and scaberulous between the veins, blunt or rounded and usually erose at the scarious tip; palea sometimes projecting as much as 1 mm; anthers 3, 1-1.7 mm; grain 1.5-2 mm; 2n=40. Shallow water or very wet soil; Mass. to Minn., s. to S.C. and Tex. (G. arkansana, a rare form with the lemmas minutely short-hairy instead of scabrous)

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

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