Puccinellia laurentiana is a perennial grass which grows on gravelly seashores in south-eastern Canada. Its specific epithet "laurentiana" refers to the Gulf of St. Lawrence, where it grows.
Puccinellia laurentiana has solitary or somewhat tufted culms growing NaNcm (-2,147,483,648inches) high. Its leaves are cauline with involute blades NaNcm (-2,147,483,648inches) long. Basal leaf sheaths can be somewhat white. Its ligules are 1.5mm long and somewhat acute. Its panicle is NaNcm (-2,147,483,648inches) long, with stiff and nearly glabrous floral branches. The branches are ascending. Its whitish spikelets are NaNmm long with three to five flowers. The acute glumes are erose to serrulate; the first glume is NaNmm long, narrowly ovate and acutish, with one nerve, and the second is long, broadly ovate and abruptly acute, with three nerves. The ovate lemmas are NaNmm long and profusely pubescent on their lower nerves. The palea are lanceolate and scabrous above. The grass typically flowers from July into early August.[1]
P. laurentiana resembles Puccinellia coarctata and Puccinellia vaginata, but differs from both in its abruptly acuminate whitish lemmas and stiff involute leaves. It additionally differs from P. coarctata in its lemmas' pubescent nerves.[2]
Puccinellia laurentiana grows on gravelly seashores and sea cliffs in south-eastern Quebec and north-eastern New Brunswick, often on the Gulf of St. Lawrence for which it is named.[1] It can rarely be found in Nova Scotia and Maine.[3]