- Source: Tridens flavus
Tridens flavus, known as purpletop, purpletop tridens, tall redtop, greasy grass, and grease grass, is a large, robust perennial bunchgrass native to eastern North America.
It widespread throughout its range and is most often found in man-made habitats, such as hay meadows and lawns.
The seeds are purple, giving the grass its common name. The seeds are also oily, leading to its other common name, "grease grass". It reproduces by seed and tillers.
The grass is often confused with the similar looking Johnson grass (Sorghum halepense), although it is only distantly related. Tridens flavus is easily distinguished by its short, hairy ligule.
It is a larval host to the common wood nymph, crossline skipper, little glassywing, and the Zabulon skipper.
Gallery
References
External links
Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation
Illinois Wildflowers
Carrier, Lyman (1917). "False redtop (Tridens flavus; fig 48)". The identification of grasses by their vegetative characters. pp. 24–5. OCLC 8983665.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Daftar spesies Oxyopidae
- Daftar spesies Salticidae (A–C)
- Daftar spesies Asilidae
- Tridens flavus
- Tridens (plant)
- Verbena bonariensis
- Vernia verna
- Shortgrass prairie
- Greasy grass
- Cynodon
- Purpletop
- List of flora of Ohio
- List of flora of Indiana