Rottboellia cochinchinensis (Lour.) W. Clayton
(=R. exaltata L. f.)
Poaceae
Andropogoneae
itchgrass, raoulgrass
segment of rachis internode with embedded sessile spikelet and pedicel, with or without pedicellate spikelet
Spikelets heteromorphic, awnless, sunken into inflated internode. Internode base truncate, with central peg. Sessile spikelets dorsally compressed, 3.5–7 mm long, 2–3 mm wide, of 1 fertile floret and 1 basal sterile floret. Lower glume indurate, as long as spikelet, 9–11 nerved; upper glume keeled above, boat-shaped, following concavity of internode. Sterile lemma and palea chartaceous, as long as upper glume. Fertile lemma hyaline, following concavity of internode. Pedicel fused to internode. Pedicellate spikelets sterile, ovate, 3–8 mm long, often separately deciduous. Caryopsis oblong-ovate, gibbous, 3–4 mm long, 2–2.2 mm wide.
Characters that may help to distinguish the genus Rottboellia from the similar genera Manisuris, Coelorachis, and Hemarthia are pedicel fused to the swollen internode, and heteromorphic and awnless spikelets. Spikelet length is a character that may help distinguish R. cochinchinensis from among the three other species in the genus.
Rottboellia selloana Hack. (non-FNW)
South Africa and much of tropical Africa, the Arabian peninsula, tropical and subtropical Asia, Australia, and the Pacific Islands; tropical South America, Central America, and throughout the Caribbean, United States
native to southern Asia
varied because of its wide geographic distribution, ranging from wet places to open, well-drained soils, and from low altitudes to higher altitudes; a weed of ditch banks, cultivated fields, thickets, teak forests
Rottboellia cochinchinensis is a rapidly spreading, tufted annual grass, to 3.5 m tall. It is a weed of rotation crops and perennial crops, most seriously in the Philippines, East Africa, the shores and islands of the Gulf of Mexico, and the Caribbean. It is often the first colonizer of disturbed land. Sharp hairs on the leaf sheaths penetrate the skin of laborers, causing infections. The grain is about the size of a rice grain, making it difficult to remove from rice seed. Propagation is solely by grain.