Upright Brome

Bromus erectus

''Bromus erectus'', commonly known as erect brome, upright brome or meadow brome, is a dense, course, tufted perennial grass. It can grow to 120 centimetres.
Bromus erctus Trespe mit Käfer  Bromus erctus,Bromus erectus,Geotagged,Spring,Switzerland

Appearance

''Bromus erectus'' is a perennial, tufted grass with basal tufts of cespitose leaves that is nonrhizomatous. The culms grow between 0.6–1.2 m in height. The internodes are typically glabrous. The flattened cauline leaves have pubescent or glabrous sheaths.

The leaf blades are 10–20 cm long and 2–6 mm wide. The grass lacks auricles and the ligule is blunt but finely serrated, sometimes with hairy edges. The contracted and ellipsoid panicle is usually upright, rather than nodding, measuring 7–15 cm long.

The lanceolate spikelets are 1.5–3 cm long and have five to twelve flowers. The glumes are acute, with the lower glumes one-nerved and 7–9 mm long, and the upper glumes three-nerved and 9–11 mm long. The glabrous or slightly scabrous lemmas are prominently nerved and 10–15 mm long, with awns 5–6 mm long. The anthers are 4–6 mm long. ''B. erectus'' flowers in June and July.

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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassMonocots
OrderPoales
FamilyPoaceae
GenusBromus
SpeciesB. erectus
Photographed in
Switzerland