Triplasis Explained

Triplasis is a genus of North American plants in the grass family. Sandgrass is a common name for plants in this genus. The genus name Triplasis is Greek, meaning "threefold", referring to the triple nerved lemmas.[1]

Description

The plants are slender-tufted perennials or annuals with short, slender leaf blades. Their short and open purplish panicles have few flowers and terminate the culms. Axils of the leaves can bear narrow and cleistogamous panicles.

Species of the genus have few-flowered spikelets and remote florets. The slender rachillas are terete and disarticulate above the glumes and between the florets. The narrow lemmas have three nerves and two lobes.[2]

Species

The genus Triplasis includes:[3]

The genus formerly included:

Notes and References

  1. Book: Gray's Manual of Botany . Merrit Lyndon Fernald . 1970 . R. C. Rollins . D. Van Nostrand Company . Eighth (Centennial) - Illustrated. 0-442-22250-5 . 130.
  2. Book: 76 . Bulletin of the U.S. Department of Agriculture . 751–775 . The United States Department of Agriculture. 1921.
  3. Web site: The Plant List search for Triplasis . The Plant List . 2013 . 5 August 2018.