PlantNET Home DONATE TODAY | PlantNET Home | Search NSW Flora | Contact Us  
FloraOnline
Introduction
Plant Name Search
Index Search
Spatial Search
Identification Keys
Classification
Glossary
WeedAlert
Telopea Journal
Other Data Sources
NEW SOUTH WALES FLORA ONLINE Printable Page

Echinochloa esculenta (A.Braun) H.Scholz
Family Poaceae
Common name: Japanese Millet

Echinochloa esculenta (A.Braun) H.Scholz APNI*

Synonyms: Echinochloa utilis Ohwi & Yabuno APNI*

Description: Erect annual to 1 m high with stout culms.

Leaves with ligule absent; blade 5–25 mm wide.

Panicle erect, 7–20 cm long, dense with erect or spreading branches. Spikelets mostly 2 or 3 together on scabrous pedicels, 3–4 mm long, obtuse to shortly acute, mostly purplish to blackish brown. Lower glume, 25–30% of spikelet length, apex acute to mucronate or obtuse, 5-nerved; upper usually shorter than spikelet and exposing upper part of maturing floret, acute, 5-nerved. Lower lemma equal to spikelet, shortly acuminate or shortly cuspidate, 7-nerved. Fertile lemma shortly apiculate, smooth, 5-nerved. Lower palea shorter and narrower than lower lemma, shortly 2-lobed. Upper palea subequal to its lemma. Grain dark.


Herbarium
Sheet

Herbarium
Sheet

Flowering: summer.

Distribution and occurrence: Cultivated for forage and grain and sometimes used as a soil stabilizer, common in birdseed mixtures, often escaped from cultivation. Originated in eastern Asia.
NSW subdivisions: *NC, *CC, *NT, *CT, *ST, *NWS, *CWS, *SWS, *NWP, *SWP
Other Australian states: *Qld *Vic. *Tas. *W.A. *S.A.
AVH map***

Text by S. W. L. Jacobs & T. A. James
Taxon concept: Flora of NSW 4 (1993)


APNI* Provides a link to the Australian Plant Name Index (hosted by the Australian National Botanic Gardens) for comprehensive bibliographic data
***The AVH map option provides a detailed interactive Australia wide distribution map drawn from collections held by all major Australian herbaria participating in the Australian Virtual Herbarium project.
  Privacy | Copyright | Disclaimer | About PlantNET | Cite PlantNET