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Bulbous bluegrass, Grama cebollera

Poa bulbosa

Description:

Annual or perennial grass forming dense clumps up to about 60 centimeters tall. The stems are smooth and hollow and usually have bulbous sections at their bases about a centimeter in length. The grass is more likely to have bulbous sections if it is growing in a drier area, and study has indicated the bulbous sections are mostly water. If the bulbous bases are detached and replanted they can give rise to new plants. The inflorescence is a wide cluster of branches bearing green leaflike spikelets with darker bases that contain bulbils. Viable seed is rarely produced, and the plant usually reproduces asexually via its basal bulbous sections and via bulbils. Although the plant reproduces vegetatively (asexaully) most of the time, it has been shown to possess high genetic variability. Many types of animals, including wild and domesticated ruminants, small mammals, and birds, readily consume this grass, especially the bulbils in the inflorescences, which contain some starches and fats. The grass is used as a fodder and a pasture grass in parts of its native region.

Habitat:

Small prairie in a Holm oak forest

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arlanda
Spotted by
arlanda

Madrid, Madrid, Spain

Spotted on Apr 12, 2013
Submitted on Apr 21, 2013

Spotted for Mission

Related Spottings

Poa bulbosa var. vivipara annual meadow grass Kentucky Bluegrass Green grass

Nearby Spottings

Holm oak acorn Sawfly; Avispa portasierra Hoverfly; Sírfido Hawthorn rust, roya del espino

Reference

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