Saccharum giganteum
[Erianthus
giganteus]
Sugarcane plume grass
Native to Florida
There are perhaps ten species of plumegrasses in the U.S., found in the southwest and the eastern half of the country. Historically they also were known from Ohio to New Hampshire, but have been removed (extirpated) during the past three hundred years (Kartesz 1999).
Sugarcane plume
grass is a grass. stems reedlike, to 12 ft. tall, forming basal clumps;
leaf blades long, flat, to 3/4 in. wide, smooth or hairy;
ligule a collar with fringe hairs; inflorescence a very large
terminal plume, pink becoming whitish, dense, cylindrical to oblong, to 18 in. long, to 5 in. wide;
plume composed of branches, loosely ascending to spreading, full of long-haired spikelets;
spikelets paired, with long bristles (awns) to 1 in. long
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