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Brachypodium distachyon Roem. & Schult.  
Go To Encyclopedia of Life...
Family: Poaceae
Purple False Brome,  more...Purple Falsebrome
[Agropyron distachyon (L.) Chevall.,  more, Brachypodium distachyum (L.) P. Beauv., Bromus distachyos L., Festuca diandra , Festuca distachya (L.) Roth, Trachynia distachya (L.) Link, Zerna distachya (L.) Panz. ex B.D. Jacks.]
Brachypodium distachyon image
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Michael B. Piep. Flora of North America

Plants annual; loosely tufted; bright green or glaucous. Culms 5-35(45-50) cm, geniculate or stiffly erect, internodes glab-rous; nodes conspicuously pub-escent. Leaves cauline; sheaths usually glabrous; ligules 0.5-2 mm, pubescent; blades 10-40 cm long, 2-5 mm wide, flat, glaucous, sparsely hairy, hairs 0.5-1 mm, veins unequally prominent, margins thickened, sparsely hairy, hairs 0.8-1.3 mm. Racemes 2-7 cm, with 1-7 usually overlapping, appressed spikelets, the basal 1-2 spikelets sometimes diverging at maturity; pedicels 0.5-1 mm. Spikelets 15-40 mm, laterally compressed, with 7-15(17) florets. Lower glumes 5-6 mm, 5-7-veined; upper glumes 7-8 mm, 7-9-veined, veins prominent, apices acute; lemmas 7-10 mm, lanceolate, 7-veined, awned, awns 8-17 mm, usually straight, sometimes curved; paleas (6.5)7-9 mm, with 2-numerous veins, 2-keeled, keels stiffly ciliate; lodicules oblong, acute, sparsely hairy, ciliate; anthers 0.5-1.1 mm. Caryopses 5.7-7.8 mm, ellipsoid, apices hairy. 2n = 20, 28, 30.

Brachypodium distachyon is native to dry, open habitats in southern Europe. It is now established in California and is known from scattered locations elsewhere in the Flora region. It is also established in Australia, where it grows in dry, disturbed areas on sandy or rocky soils.

Brachypodium distachyon is sometimes treated as the only member of Trachynia Link. It differs from other species of Brachypodium in being a cleistogamous annual with shorter pedicels and anthers, laterally compressed spikelets, and fewer spikelets per raceme. Molecular data (Catalán and Olmstead 2000) show it as the basal lineage within Brachypodium. It has been proposed as a model species for molecular work in the Poaceae.

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Brachypodium distachyon
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Zoya Akulova  
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Barry Breckling  
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Zoya Akulova  
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Bart and Susan Eisenberg  
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Zoya Akulova  
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Kathy M. Davis, University of Florida Herbarium  
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The National Science Foundation
Development of SEINet, Symbiota, and several of the specimen databases have been supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)