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Lachnagrostis billardierei

Species of plant From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lachnagrostis billardierei
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Lachnagrostis billardierei, commonly known as coast blown-grass or sand wind grass, is a species of plant in the true grass family.[1] It is found in largely coastal areas in New Zealand and Australia.[1]

Quick facts Conservation status, Scientific classification ...
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Description

A. billardierei is a tufted perennial grass, with glaucous to bluish-green leaves, about 50 cm in height. It forms circular tufts of leaf blades and straw-coloured flowers.[1] The seeds are wind-dispersed.[2]

In New Zealand, L. billardierei could be confused with two other coastal Lachnagrostis; L. pilosa subsp. pilosa, or L. tenuis, both of which are nationally endemic. From L. pilosa subsp. pilosa, L. billardierei can be distinguished by its hairless lemmas. From L. tenuis, the most similar species, L. billardierei can be distinguished by its 2.5-6-10 mm wide, flat leaf-blades, and its longer spikelets (4-5-6 mm), in comparison to the 0.3-0.9 mm, inrolled leaves, and 3-5 mm spikelets of L. tenuis.[3]

The two subspecies can be distinguished by the length of the awns:

  • L. b. subsp. billardierei: awns are >3.5mm, and longer than glumes.
  • L. b. subsp. tenuiseta, awns are <2mm, and not or hardly longer than glumes.[4]
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Distribution

Its principal area of occurrence is south-eastern Australia and New Zealand, though there are also records from the Warren IBRA bioregion of south-western Western Australia.[5]

Two subspecies are recognised:

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Habitat

L. billardierei is a mainly coastal species, with a few inland records mainly in Australia.[8] Coastal habitats include sand dunes, cobble and boulder beaches, cliff faces, coastal lagoon and pond edges, and free draining estuarine river banks. In New Zealand, it occasionally occurs well inland on limestone or calcareous sandstone bluffs.[1]

Taxonomy

Lachnagrostis billardierei has three synonyms. It was originally described in 1810 as Agrostis billardierei R.Br., in the Prodromus Flora Novae Hollandiae.[9] Following this, it has been recognised as a Lachnagrostis in 1820, Deyeuxia in 1829, and Calamagrostis in 1840. Presently, it is recognised as Lachagrostis billardierei (R.Br.) Trin.[10]

The genus name means “woolly agrostis” with reference to the closely related genus Agrostis; the specific epithet billardierei honours French botanist Jacques Labillardière (1755–1834).[1]

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Photos

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Profile
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Leaf-blade
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Flowering on sand
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Flowers close-up
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L. billardierei in rocky habitat.

References

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