Genus of flowering plants in the grass family Poaceae
meadow foxtail (Alopecurus pratensis ) [ 5]
Alopecurus , or foxtail grass , is a common and widespread genus of plants in the grass family . It is common across temperate and subtropical parts of Eurasia , northern Africa , and the Americas , as well as naturalized in Australia and on various islands.[ 6]
Foxtails can be annual or perennial . They grow in tufts. They have flat leaves and blunt ligules (a small flap at the junction of leaf and stem). Their inflorescence is a dense panicle (a branching head without terminal flower ) with 1-flowered spikelets . A few, particularly A. myosuroides , are considered weeds , others are very decorative and are used in bouquets of dried flowers.
Species[ 4]
Alopecurus aequalis – Orange foxtail, shortawn foxtail – Eurasia, Americas
Alopecurus albovii – Caucasus
Alopecurus anatolicus – eastern Turkey
Alopecurus apiatus – Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran
Alopecurus arundinaceus – Reed foxtail, creeping foxtail, creeping meadow foxtail – Eurasia, North Africa
Alopecurus aucheri – Caucasus, Turkey, Iran
Alopecurus baptarrhenius – Ethiopia
Alopecurus bonariensis – Argentina, Uruguay
Alopecurus borii – Turkmenistan
Alopecurus bornmuelleri – Palestine
Alopecurus brachystachus – Russia, China, Mongolia
Alopecurus bulbosus – Bulbous foxtail – Mediterranean, western Europe
Alopecurus carolinianus – tufted meadow foxtail – US, western Canada
Alopecurus creticus – Greece, Turkey, Balkans
Alopecurus dasyanthus – Caucasus, Iran
Alopecurus davisii – Samos Island in Greece
Alopecurus geniculatus – Bent foxtail, marsh meadow foxtail – Algeria, Eurasia
Alopecurus gerardii – Mediterranean
Alopecurus glacialis – Caucasus, Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan
Alopecurus × haussknechtianus – central + northwestern Europe
Alopecurus heliochloides – Chile
Alopecurus himalaicus – Himalayas, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Central Asia, Xinjiang
Alopecurus hitchcockii – Peru, Bolivia, Jujuy
Alopecurus japonicus – China, Japan, Korea
Alopecurus laguroides – Caucasus, Turkey
Alopecurus lanatus – Turkey
Alopecurus longiaristatus – Heilongjiang , Primorye , Khabarovsk
Alopecurus magellanicus – northern Eurasia, North + South America, Falkland Is , South Georgia
Alopecurus × marssonii – Ukraine
Alopecurus mucronatus – Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan
Alopecurus myosuroides – Slender meadow foxtail, black grass, twitch grass, black twitch – Eurasia, North Africa
Alopecurus nepalensis – Himalayas, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan
Alopecurus × plettkei – France, Germany, Belgium, Netherlands
Alopecurus ponticus – Caucasus
Alopecurus pratensis – meadow foxtail – Eurasia from Azores to Mongolia
Alopecurus rendlei – central + southern Europe, Algeria, Libya, Turkey
Alopecurus saccatus – Pacific foxtail – United States (WA OR ID CA ), Baja California
Alopecurus setarioides – France, Greece, Italy, Balkans, Turkey
Alopecurus textilis – Turkey, Caucasus, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Turkmenistan
Alopecurus turczaninovii – Siberia
Alopecurus × turicensis – France, Switzerland
Alopecurus utriculatus – Greece, Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Cyprus, Syria, Lebanon, Palestine
Alopecurus vaginatus – Crimea, Caucasus, Turkey, Middle East, Iran, Afghanistan
Alopecurus × winklerianus – France, Switzerland, Germany, Poland
formerly included[ 4]
Numerous species once considered part of Alopecurus but now regarded as better suited to other genera: Agrostis , Cornucopiae , Crypsis , Koeleria , Milium , Muhlenbergia , Pennisetum , Perotis , Phleum , Polypogon , Rostraria , Setaria and, Tribolium .
See also
References
^ Linnaeus, Carl von 1753. Species Plantarum 1: 60–61 in Latin
^ lectotype designated by Cope, Regnum Veg. 127: 17 (1993)
^ Tropicos, Alopecurus L.
^ a b c Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families
^ illustration from Thomé, Flora von Deutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz 1885
^ Watson L, Dallwitz MJ. (2008). "The grass genera of the world: descriptions, illustrations, identification, and information retrieval; including synonyms, morphology, anatomy, physiology, phytochemistry, cytology, classification, pathogens, world and local distribution, and references" . The Grass Genera of the World . Retrieved 2009-08-19 .
External links