Always private
DuckDuckGo never tracks your searches.
Learn More
You can hide this reminder in Search Settings
All regions
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Belgium (fr)
Belgium (nl)
Brazil
Bulgaria
Canada (en)
Canada (fr)
Catalonia
Chile
China
Colombia
Croatia
Czech Republic
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hong Kong
Hungary
Iceland
India (en)
Indonesia (en)
Ireland
Israel (en)
Italy
Japan
Korea
Latvia
Lithuania
Malaysia (en)
Mexico
Netherlands
New Zealand
Norway
Pakistan (en)
Peru
Philippines (en)
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
Saudi Arabia
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa
Spain (ca)
Spain (es)
Sweden
Switzerland (de)
Switzerland (fr)
Taiwan
Thailand (en)
Turkey
Ukraine
United Kingdom
US (English)
US (Spanish)
Vietnam (en)
Safe search: moderate
Strict
Moderate
Off
Any time
Any time
Past day
Past week
Past month
Past year
  1. More Images

    Eragrostis minor

    Eragrostis minor, the little lovegrass or smaller stinkgrass, is a widespread species of flowering plant in the family Poaceae, native to most of the subtropical and warm temperate Old World, and introduced to North America, South America, and Australia. Preferring disturbed open places with little competition, and sandy or gravelly soils, it is often found growing on rail embankments, road verges, cracks in sidewalks, and waste areas. Its seeds are edible, but quite small and difficult to harvest and handle, so it is usually regarded as a famine food. Wikipedia

    Was this helpful?
  2. en.wikipedia.org

    Eragrostis minor, the little lovegrass or smaller stinkgrass, is a widespread species of flowering plant in the family Poaceae, native to most of the subtropical and warm temperate Old World, and introduced to North America, South America, and Australia. [1] [2] Preferring disturbed open places with little competition, and sandy or gravelly soils, it is often found growing on rail embankments ...
  3. Was this helpful?
  4. minnesotawildflowers.info

    It most closely resembles Stink Grass (Eragrostis cilianensis), which is similarly glandular, but is distinguished by mature spikelets over 2 mm wide and sheaths that are essentially hairless on the surface where E. minor spikelets are usually under 2 mm wide and sheaths are usually at least sparsely hairy along the edges and/or the surface.
  5. powo.science.kew.org

    Homotypic Synonyms. Eragrostis cilianensis f.minor (Host) Maire & Weiller in Fl. Afrique N. 2: 175 (1953) Eragrostis cilianensis subsp. pooides (Husn.) Maire in Fl. Afrique N. 2: 175 (1953) Eragrostis eragrostis var. microstachya Farw. in Amer. Midl. Naturalist 10: 306 (1927), not validly publ.; Eragrostis megastachya subsp. pooides Husn. in Graminées: 55 (1898) ...
  6. beta.floranorthamerica.org

    Eragrostis minor: 13 Plants without glandular pits or bands. > 19: 19 Spikelets (1.6)2-4 mm wide; florets disarticulating intact from the persistent rachillas Eragrostis unioloides: 19 Spikelets 0.6-2.5 mm wide; lemmas disarticulating separately from the paleas, sometimes both the paleas and the rachillas persistent. > 20: 20
  7. fsus.ncbg.unc.edu

    * Eragrostis minor Host. Little Lovegrass, Bluegrass Lovegrass. Phen: Late Jun-Sep. Hab: Disturbed areas, compacted soils of pastures and fields, other disturbed areas, as in cinders along railroads. Dist: Native of Europe. Origin/Endemic status: Europe.
  8. inaturalist.org

    Eragrostis minor, the little lovegrass or smaller stinkgrass, is a widespread species of flowering plant in the family Poaceae, native to most of the subtropical and warm temperate Old World, and introduced to North America, South America, and Australia. Preferring disturbed open places with little competition, and sandy or gravelly soils, it is often found growing on rail embankments, road ...
  9. Eragrostis minor intergrades with Eragrostis cilianensis, being distinguished by the narrower oblong (rather than ovate) spikelets, shorter lemmas, more open panicle and oblong (rather than globose) grain. No single character can be relied upon to separate the species. For the present purpose, however, grain shape has been taken as decisive in ...
  10. beta.floranorthamerica.org

    Plants annual; tufted, without innovations.Culms 10-45 cm, erect to decumbent, sometimes with a ring of glandular tissue below the nodes.Sheaths sometimes glandular on the midveins, hairy at the apices, hairs to 4 mm; ligules 0.2-0.5 mm, ciliate; blades 1.5-10 cm long, 1-3(4) mm wide, flat, glabrous or sparsely white-hairy, margins sometimes with crateriform glands.

    Can’t find what you’re looking for?

    Help us improve DuckDuckGo searches with your feedback

Custom date rangeX