The
Commelinidae
Family Overview - Cyperales
Poaceae (Gramineae) - the Grass Family
Diversity: often tufted (caespitose) perennial herbs, also many annuals, rhizomatous or stoloniferous perennials and some 'woody' types (bamboo) - ca. 500 genera and 8,000 species.This family includes many important domesticates, including the world's most important cash crop - Triticum aestivum (breadwheat-Eurasia), its most important food crop - Oryza sativa (rice-Asia), the monoecious Indian Corn (Zea mays-Americas), and the most extensive crop of the local Brazos bottoms - Sorghum bicolor (sorghum, milo - Africa). Perhaps just as important, from an economic point of view, are the suite of taxa used as forage for domesticated animals and the creation of human-dominated environments (turf grasses). Many of these have 'escaped' cultivation and, especially in disturbed areas, established a strong position in our local flora.
Distribution: Worldwide, present in abundance in just about all habitats and ecological zones and often forming the dominant element in open areas (prairie, savannah, etc.). The Texas flora includes 122 genera and 523 species with 15 endemic species representing 13 genera, including one listed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service as endangered, Texas Wild Rice (Zizania texana) (see also a full listing of North American taxa--this page will load, but its links will not work if the csdl server is down).
Floral structure:
Significant features: Small, reduced flowers on (often) tufted or caespitose plants with linear, sheathing leaves. Differing from the Cyperaceae with its round (terete in cross section) stems ('culms'), hollow (not pithy or solid) at the internodes, and leaves 2-ranked or arranged in 2 rows. Sheathing leaf bases of the are also often 'open' or loosely connected to the culm, often showing a ligule at the point where the leaf blade meets the sheath. Reproductive structures are distinct in that the inflorescences are made up of 'subinflorescences' known as spikelets. The grass spikelet is defined by two basal 'sterile bracts' or glumes. These subtend either a single (simple spikelet) or several (compound) florets. The term 'floret', when applied to grasses, refers to the flower and two 'fertile' bracts that usually enclose the flower, the lemma and palea. The perianth is reduced to vestigial structures, lodicules, positioned beneath the ovary and the fruit is single-seeded with the testa adnate to the pericarp, a caryopsis. In contrast to most large families, the fruit is usually not needed for species identification.
Grasses have evolved in response to grazing
selective pressure,
probably applied initially by large ungulate populations that once
inhabited
the earth's prairie areas. Their strategy has been one of
accommodation,
as opposed to defense, in that the grass leaf carries an intercalary meristem that allows continued
growth
after grazing (or mowing). This adaptation has allowed grasses to
persist
and diversify, relative to other possible competitors (most dicots), in
the
presence of strong grazing pressure.
Base structures:
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Wild Oats - often found
along your local roadside:
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Perennial Rye Grass -
another colonizing grass (diagrams):
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See Texas Grasses
for more information and Internet
resources. These resources may not
work if the csdl server is down.