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THE GRASS FAMILY
 
The grass family is economically and ecologically important. Many of the world’s crops are products of the grasses. In addition, grasses are represented in almost all terrestrial ecosystems and are an important part of the natural food chain.

The grasses have a set of structures unique to the family. These plants can be annual or perennial and are usually herbaceous. The roots are fibrous, but rhizomes or runners may be found in some species. The stems are solitary or tufted, and may be branched. The stems are round with hollow internodes and solid nodes. The leaves are basal or on the stem. The stem leaves are 2-ranked, meaning they are in two vertical rows and are sheathing at the base. A ligule is present where the leaf sheath and the blade meet. The florets are in spikelets which are then arranged into clusters called spikes, racemes, or panicles. The spikelets usually have two glumes at the base and may be one to several-flowered. Sometimes there are sterile florets, which may consist only of the palea and lemma, present above or below the fertile florets. The florets are usually perfect, meaning that they have both male and female parts. The lemma and palea are the two bracts that subtend each floret. The lemma may be awnless or awned from the tip or the back. Each fertile floret has between one and three stamens and one superior ovary with a feathery stigma. The fruit type is a caryopsis or grain and is unique to the grass family.
 
LANATE BLUEGRASS
 
  LATIN NAME:    Poa arctica ssp. lanata
 
WHAT DOES IT LOOK LIKE?
 
Lanate bluegrass grows as tall as 50 cm from a well-developed rhizome and a fibrous root system. The stems are densely tufted and are bent at the base. The leaves are 2 to 6 mm wide and are flat or folded. There are ten to 40 spikelets in a lax, open cluster. The spikelets occasionally have sterile florets replacing the fertile ones. The glumes are three-nerved. The brownish lemmas have cobwebby hairs at the base and are hairy on the nerves. The palea is usually hairy on and between the veins.
 
WHERE DOES IT GROW?
 
In Saskatchewan, lanate bluegrass grows in a sand dune complex.
 
WHERE IS IT FOUND IN SASKATCHEWAN?
 
This plant is found in northern Saskatchewan in the Athabasca Plain ecoregion.
 
WHY IS IT RARE?
 
Lanate bluegrass is endangered because it is extremely rare and limited to one small region of the province. No immediate threats are known but quite possible in the future.
 
HOW TO IDENTIFY LANATE BLUEGRASS
  * Do the lemmas have cobwebby hairs at the base?
* Are the lemma and the palea boat-shaped?
* Are the lemmas brownish?
* Did you find it in northern Saskatchewan?
If you answered yes to all of these questions, you may have found lanate bluegrass!