Festuca beckeri explained

Festuca beckeri is a species of grass which can be found in Central and Western Asia, and also in Europe.[1]

Description

The plant is perennial and caespitose with erect culms that are 20– long. They are also clumped and have light brown coloured butt sheaths. The ligule is going around the eciliate membrane with the leaf sheaths being open and hairy. Leaf-blades are filiform, conduplicate, light green in colour, and are 0.3– broad. They also have smooth surface and peduncle. The panicle is linear, open, inflorescenced and is 6– long.[1]

Spikelets are elliptic and solitary with pedicelled fertile spikelets that carry 4-6 fertile florets. The main panicle branches are hairy. The glumes are chartaceous, lanceolate, and keelless. They also have acute apexes, while only the upper glume is sized 2.9–. Fertile lemma is 2.5– long and is also chartaceous, lanceolate, keelless, and are of the same colour as leaf blades. The main lemma have an acuminate apex and carries one awn that is 0.3– long. Flowers have three stamens while the fruits are caryopses with an additional pericarp and linear hilum.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Festuca beckeri. W.D. Clayton . M. Vorontsova . Maria Vorontsova (botanist). K.T. Harman . H. Williamson . GrassBase. The Board of Trustees and Royal Botanic Gardens. Kew. November 16, 2012. December 6, 2013.