• Peterson P.M. & Planchuelo A.M. (1998) Bromus catharticus in South America (Poaceae: Bromeae). (myspecies.info)
  • Planchuelo A.M. (1991) Estudios sobre el complejo Bromus catharticus (Poaceae): 1. (myspecies.info)
  • Planchuelo A.M. (2006) A new combination in the Bromus catharticus complex (Poaceae: Bromeae sect. (myspecies.info)
  • Schneider M. & Vegetti A. (1996) Tipologia de las inflorescencias en Bromus catharticus y Bromus auleticus (Poaceae). (myspecies.info)
  • Vegetti A.C. (1997) Formas de crecimiento en Bromus catharticus y B. auleticus (Poaceae). (myspecies.info)
  • Poaceae: Bromus sp. (efloraofindia.com)
  • Bromus catharticus Vahl (syn. (myspecies.info)
  • Pinto Escobar P. (1976) Nota sobre el ejemplar tipo de "Bromus catharticus" Vahl. (myspecies.info)
  • Simon B.K. (1982) Nomenclatural notes on Bromus catharticus Vahl. (myspecies.info)
  • Cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum) is a dominant species, but this dataset also includes Bromus arvensis L., Bromus briziformis Fisch. (mrlc.gov)
  • Bromus catharticus is a species of brome grass known by the common names rescuegrass, grazing brome, prairie grass, and Schrader's bromegrass. (wikipedia.org)
  • Bromus catharticus is a coarse winter annual or biennial grass, growing 0.2-1 m (7.9 in - 3 ft 3.4 in) in height. (wikipedia.org)
  • Bromus catharticus itself also is a variable species. (myspecies.info)
  • B. willdenowii ) as the correct name for this species, while B. catharticus , at least in part, represents a distinct species (see Ammann 2007). (myspecies.info)
  • Bromus * for sure but cant say about species. (efloraofindia.com)
  • We develop and release EAG fractional cover map with an emphasis on cheatgrass (Bromus tectrorum) but it also includes number of other species, i.e. (sciencebase.gov)
  • rubens (L.) Duvin, Bromus racemosus L., Bromus rubens L., Bromus secalinus L., Bromus texensis (Shear) Hitchc, and medusahead (Taeniatherum caput-medusae (L.) Nevski). (mrlc.gov)
  • In addition to the characters provided in the key, in Bromus catharticus spikelets are often more strongly laterally compressed (flattened), often strikingly bicoloured and lemmas and glumes more-veined. (myspecies.info)
  • Ekman J. (1989) Sloklosta Bromus sitchensis och plattlosta B. willdenowii i Sverige. (myspecies.info)
  • Bromus Catharticus, or more commonly know as Rescuegrass , is a graminoid with green foliage and yellow flowers of the genus Bromus. (sagebud.com)
  • QUERY: SELECT * FROM img WHERE ready=1 and genre = "Plant" and taxon = "Bromus catharticus var. (berkeley.edu)
  • catharticus has awns 0,5-4 (-5) mm long and convolute young leaf blades (Peterson & Planchuelo 1998). (myspecies.info)
  • Bromus catharticus , especially forms with unusually long awns, is regularly confused with B. carinatus . (myspecies.info)
  • The nomenclature and taxonomy of Bromus catharticus have long been controversial. (myspecies.info)
  • Bromus catharticus grows in open and disturbed areas. (wikipedia.org)
  • Bromus catharticus is now widely accepted as a collective taxon that includes, among others, B. brevis . (myspecies.info)
  • In Belgian herbaria Bromus carinatus has surprisingly often been confused with (awned forms of) B. inermis . (myspecies.info)
  • Moreover, palea texture appears to be quite different in both taxa: in Bromus carinatus (and other taxa of section Ceratochloa ) the palea exhibits at maturity the same texture as the lemma (with a narrow hyaline margin around the keel), whereas in B. inermis (and related taxa) the palea is almost entirely membranous. (myspecies.info)
  • Brome, smooth- Bromus inermis Leyss. (govregs.com)
  • QUERY: SELECT * FROM img WHERE ready=1 and genre = "Plant" and taxon = "Bromus catharticus var. (berkeley.edu)
  • The populations formerly naturalised near the Botanic Garden in Brussel are characterised by hairy spikelets and/or leaf sheaths and slightly shorter lemma-awns and have been ascribed to another North American taxon, Bromus marginatus Nees ex Steudel (syn. (myspecies.info)
  • Moreover, after transferring this taxon to Bromus catharticus s.l. the delimitation between this species and B. carinatus is further blurred, especially because palea dimensions of var. (myspecies.info)
  • Si cette esp ce est rapport e au genre Ceratochloa dans Flora Gallica (2014), elle appartient au genre Bromus dans les ouvrages floristiques ant rieurs : Bromus unioloides Fournier (1946), Bromus schraderi Coste (1937), Bromus catharticus ou Brome purgatif (Jauze in et MontegUt (1983), Jauzein (1995), Bernard (1996), Lambinon et al. (cbnbrest.fr)
  • Les auteurs de la Flore de la France m diterran enne continentale (2014) placent Bromus catharticus dans le sous-genre Ceratochloa, Verloove (2014) parle, lui, de la section Ceratochloa du genre Bromus. (cbnbrest.fr)
  • In North America Bromus marginatus was recently reduced to varietal rank under B. carinatus (Barkworth & al. (myspecies.info)
  • However, these diacritic features are shared with forms of Bromus carinatus and both are perhaps better considered as conspecific. (myspecies.info)
  • Bromus carinatus Hook. (myspecies.info)
  • Bromus carinatus usually grows on rough ground, canal banks or roadsides. (myspecies.info)
  • Bromus carinatus is here treated in a broad sense. (myspecies.info)
  • The length of the lower panicle branches in fact seems to be correlated with age: "typical" plants of Bromus sitchensis often correspond rather with B. carinatus when collected earlier. (myspecies.info)
  • Moreover, palea- and rachilla length - important characters to distinguish between Bromus carinatus and B. sitchensis according to Portal (1995) - appear to be variable within one specimen, sometimes even within one spikelet. (myspecies.info)
  • Swedish records of Bromus sitchensis - the oldest binomial of the two -, in fact, include B. carinatus (Ekman 1989). (myspecies.info)
  • With its long-awned lemmas it is usually accommodated in the Bromus carinatus -group but it has recently been given varietal rank under B. catharticus as well (var. (myspecies.info)
  • Bromus catharticus grows in open and disturbed areas. (wikipedia.org)