Saccharum spontaneum L.
Poaceae
Andropogoneae
wild sugarcane
sessile spikelet with pedicel and internode, with or without pedicellate spikelet
Spikelets homomorphic, ca. 3.3–4.5 mm long, ca. 0.5-0.6 mm wide, awnless, of 1 fertile floret and 1 basal sterile lemma. Spikelet callus with silky silvery hairs 2–3 times longer than spikelet (to 12 mm long). Glumes as long as spikelet, papery (chartaceous), dark brown below middle at maturity, membranous and pallid (pale, white, colorless) above, acuminate, upper margins ciliate; lower glume 2–4 nerved; upper glume keeled. Sterile lemma half as long as spikelet, hyaline. Fertile lemma shorter than sterile lemma, hyaline. Internode and pedicel slender, bearing long hairs; internode ca. 3.4–6.1 mm long, pedicel ca. 1.8–3.5 mm long, apex of pedicel flared and hairy.
Saccharum officinarum L. (non-FNW)
native to tropical Africa and Asia
widespread in northern and tropical Africa and South Africa, through the eastern Mediterranean, the Middle East, South and Southeast Asia to Australia, and throughout much of the Pacific Basin; Central America and the Lesser Antilles, United States
Weedy ecotypes are native to India.
tropical and subtropical, in a wide range of habitats including marshes, stream banks, sand dunes; tolerates many soil types and moisture levels; a weed of roadsides, waste areas, fields
Saccharum spontaneum is a tall perennial grass with deep roots and rhizomes, to 4 m tall. Believed to be a predecessor of the important species S. officinarum L. (cultivated sugarcane), it has also been crossed with S. officinarum to yield hardy, disease-resistant sugarcane varieties. Some of the biotypes of S. spontaneum are weedy, infesting a number of crops, mostly in central and Southeast Asia. In India, it has infested millions of acres, often causing abandonment of fields. Deep plowing has helped reduce populations of the weed.