Urochloa panicoides Beauv.
(=Panicum helopus Trin.)
Poaceae
Paniceae
liverseed grass
spikelet; disarticulation below glumes
Spikelets of 1 fertile floret and 1 basal sterile lemma; spikelet elliptic, strongly dorsally compressed, plano-convex, apex acute; 2.5–5.5 mm long, 1.5–2.25 mm wide. Glumes membranous, glabrous, dissimilar; lower glume ca. 1/4 – 1/3 (1/2) as long as spikelet, wrapping around the base of the spikelet, 3–5-nerved; upper glume as long as spikelet, 7–13-nerved. Sterile lemma similar to upper glume, but 5–7-nerved. Fertile lemma elliptic, 2.6–3.5 mm long, 1.5–2 mm wide, indurate, surface with numerous, low transverse ridges, apex obtuse and awned, awn 0.3–1 mm long, not extending beyond tip of spikelet; lemma margins inrolled, enclosing palea. Caryopsis 2–2.5 mm long; embryo ca. 3/4 as long as caryopsis; hilum linear to narrowly obovate, 1/3 length of caryopsis.
Urochloa ramosa (L.) R.D. Webster (non-FNW)
Urochloa texana (Buckley) R.D. Webster (non-FNW)
Africa: Botswana, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Somalia, South Africa, Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe; Asia: Yemen, India, Pakistan, Thailand; Australia; Argentina; United States
native to southern Africa
woodlands, shrublands, damp places; a weed of lawns, roadsides, rotation crops, pastures.
Urochloa panicoides is a tufted annual grass, to 100 cm tall. In Australia, it grows in tropical-subtropical sub-humid woodlands to semi-arid shrub woodlands. It is reported to cause nitrate poisoning in livestock.