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Enneapogon cenchroides (Licht.ex Roem. & Schult.) C.E.Hubb.  
Family: Poaceae
soft feather pappus grass, more...South African Nine-Awn Grass, soft feather pappusgrass, Softfeather Pappusgrass
[Enneapogon mollis Lehm.]
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Max Licher
  • FNA
  • SW Field Guide
  • Resources
John R. Reeder. Flora of North America

Plants annual. Culms 50-80(100) cm, about 2 mm thick, usually rather robust, erect or somewhat geniculate at the base, often branching; nodes pubescent. Sheaths mostly shorter than the internodes, somewhat loose; blades 6-12(20) cm long, 1-7(10) mm wide, flat, becoming involute, apices attenuate. Panicles 10-20(30) cm long, to 3 cm wide at the base, loosely contracted to somewhat open. Spikelets 3.2-6.8 mm. Lower glumes 2.8-5.1 mm; upper glumes 3.2-6.8 mm, 3-veined; lowest lemmas 1.5-2 mm; awns 2.5-5 mm, usually exceeding the glumes; anthers 1-1.8 mm. 2n = 40.

Enneapogon cenchroides has been introduced and is persisting in the Ajo, Santa Catalina, Tucson, and Galiuro mountains of southern Arizona. Outside the Americas, its range extends from Sudan southward to the Cape Provinces of South Africa, through Saudi Arabia to India, and on Ascension Island.

FNA 2003
Common Name: soft feather pappusgrass Duration: Annual Nativity: Non-Native Lifeform: Graminoid General: Annual with stems 50-80 cm, about 2 mm thick, robust, erect or somewhat geniculate at the base, often branching, pubescent nodes; sheaths mostly shorter than internodes. Vegetative: Blades 6-12 cm long, 1-7 mm wide, flat, becoming involute with attenuate apices; ligule of hairs. Inflorescence: Terminal spikelike panicles, loosely contracted to somewhat open, 10-20 cm long, to 3 cm wide at the base, loosely contracted to somewhat open; spikelets 3-7 mm with 3-6 florets; subequal glumes, pubescent, upper 3-veined 3-6.5 mm; lowest lemmas 1.5-2 mm with awns 2.5-5 mm, usually exceeding the glumes. Ecology: Found on disturbed sites in mountain ranges of the Sonoran Desert. Notes: This species has the potential to become a dangerously invasive species. Distinguished from E. desvauxii by the emarginate upper glume apex, along with slightly thicker stems that are only slightly enlarged at the base. Ethnobotany: Unknown Etymology: Enneapogon is from the Greek ennea, nine and pogon, a beard, referring to the nine plumose awns, while cenchroides comes from the Latin cenchros, for millet, so the name means like millet. Synonyms: Enneapogon mollis Editor: SBuckley, 2010
Enneapogon cenchroides
Open Interactive Map
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Max Licher
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Anthony Mendoza
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Sue Carnahan
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Liz Makings
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Sue Carnahan
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Liz Makings
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Liz Makings
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Sue Carnahan
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Sue Carnahan
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Max Licher
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Max Licher
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Anthony Mendoza
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Anthony Mendoza
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Sue Carnahan
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Anthony Mendoza
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Anthony Mendoza
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Anthony Mendoza
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Anthony Mendoza
Enneapogon cenchroides image
Anthony Mendoza
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Liz Makings
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Liz Makings
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The National Science Foundation
Development supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)
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