Details about map content are available here Click on the map dots to view record details.
Introduction
This native perennial, xenophytic, warm season, grass species is red-listed in British Columbia. It is a tufted, mat-forming species with short rhizomes. In North America, it is found across the central and western US (excluding Washington and Oregon), in a few northeastern states, and in five Canadian provinces (BC, Alberta, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Ontario). In British Columbia, it has been collected in the southern interior, in the south-central and southeastern sections of the province, in dry grasslands the steppe zone (e.g. UBC Herbarium records: Brink, 1939, Kamloops; Bjork 2007, Thompson Plateau). It is reported as a "principle species of aspen parklands in Canada", but is also "found in the understorey of riparian cottonwood forests in the Central Plains" (Anderson 2003). Blue gamma grass produces abundant seed which is wind-dispersed (Anderson 2003). It has variable fire tolerance, although fire appears to favour this species (Anderson 2003). It is a facultative mycorrhizal species (Allen et al. 1984).
Blue gamma grass was reported from Europe (Barcelona, Spain) for the first time in 2004, from a dry, rocky area (Verloove 2004).
References:
Allen, Michael F., Edith B. Allen and Peter D. Stahl. 1984. Differential niche response of Bouteloua gracilis and Pascopyrum smithii to VA mycorrhizae. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 111 (3): 361-365.
Anderson, Michelle D. 2003. Bouteloua gracilis. In: In: Fire Effects Information System, Available Online, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer).
Verloove, Filip. 2004. Bouteloua gracilis (Chloridoideae, Poaceae), a new American xenophyte in Europe. Willdenowia 34: 67-69. Available Online.
Species Information
Click on the image below to view an
expanded illustration for this species.
General: Perennial grass from short rhizomes, forming thick mats; stems slender, 20-40 (50) cm tall.
Leaves: Leaves mostly basal and persistent; sheaths open, smooth to soft-hairy, the throats with numerous, stiff hairs mostly 1-1.5 (2) mm long, the collars usually smooth; blades 1-2 mm wide, flat, becoming crisp or curly in midwinter, smooth or commonly soft-hairy, the hairs from minutely blistery bases; ligules about 0.5 mm long.
Flowers: Inflorescence of 2 (sometimes 1 or 3), straight or crescent-shaped, racemose spikes, 1.5-4 (5) cm long, short-stalked; spikelets usually 30-80, unstalked in 2 rows on one side of the rachis, with a single perfect flower below 1 or 2 greatly reduced sterile flowers, often purplish, the rudimentary florets consisting of lemmas only with awns 5-6 mm long; glumes about 2-3 and 3-5 (5.5) mm long, the lower much smaller and narrower, 1-nerved, fringed with hairs and more or less blistery on the keels; lowermost (fertile) lemmas about 6 mm long including the central awn-tipped lobes, 3-nerved; paleas about equalling the bodies of the lemmas, 2-nerved; rachillas not prolonged; anthers about 3 mm long; lodicules about 0.3 mm long.
The table below shows the species-specific information calculated from original data (BEC database) provided by the BC Ministry of Forests and Range. (Updated August, 2013)