Scientific Name: Bouteloua dactyloides
Common Name(s): Buffalograss, buffalo grass
Family: Poaceae (grass)
Life Cycle: Perennial
Leaf Retention: Semi-evergreen
Habit: Graminoid
USDA L48 Native Status: Native
Location: Plano, Texas
Season(s): Spring
Flowering.
The red bits dangling from filaments are anthers, which are the pollen-bearing parts of flowers. Grasses are wind-pollinated and don’t need to attract animal pollinators with showy petals, so grass flowers are a lot less conspicuous than how we normally picture flowers to look. The other features of a flower are still present, with the exposed anthers being perhaps the most visible.
To learn more about the anatomy of grasses and their flowers, watch the video below:
Even though grasses (family Poaceae) are flowering plants, the flowers are not the most conspicuous part of the plant. But have you ever see
Scientific Name: Chasmanthium latifolium
Common Name(s): Inland sea oats, inland wood oats
Family: Poaceae (grass)
Life Cycle: Perennial
Leaf Retention: Deciduous
Habit: Graminoid
USDA L48 Native Status: Native
Location: Plano, Texas
Season(s): Fall
When I first heard the name “inland sea oats,” I wondered if it was an oat that grew near an inland sea or if it was some variant of a sea oat that grew inland. Short answer: it’s the latter. Sort of. Then it gets complicated. For starters, there are more names. This plant must’ve hit the jackpot in the common name lottery, because, in addition to inland sea oats and inland wood oats, it’s also called river oats, wood oats (without the “inland”), Indian wood oats, upland oats, wild oats, northern sea oats, plus regional variations, and endless permutations of all these.
This is a shade-tolerant plant native to the southeastern U.S., as shown by the green-tinted areas in the USDA map below. It is found along riverbanks, on floodplains, and in bottomland forests, giving rise to the names “river oats” and “wood oats.”
Its seedheads resemble those of sea oats (Uniola paniculata), which grows on coastal sands. However, since this species is not a coastal plant, the combination of its similar appearance but dissimilar habitat get mashed together into the awkward name “inland sea oats.” As both of these plants were once classified under the same genus (Uniola), it’s not clear to me if they’re as genetically distinct as the separate genera would suggest. So the slightly longer answer to my original question is: it’s a maybe, maybe-not sea oat that grows inland.
However, neither plant has ever been associated with Avena, which is the genus to which our breakfast oats belong. I thnk using the name “wild oats” on this plant is just going to cause confusion, because the farmed oat (Avena sativa) has a wild relative (Avena fatua), and its common name is — wait for it — wild oat.
It should be clear by now that common names can be unreliable, but perhaps the most nonsensical one here is “northern sea oats,” because this species is not native to the north, not a seaside plant, and not an oat. How anyone came up with that name is a complete mystery to me.
Golden bamboo is often used as a hedge or screening bush for privacy. Canes turn yellow with exposure to sun and deepen to gold-orange as the plant matures. A nonnative plant in North America, this bamboo often overtakes many native species and can lead to imbalance in an ecosystem.
Solar Exposure: Full sun to partial shade
Hardiness Zones: 4-8
Preferred Soil: Loam; well drained; slightly acidic to slightly alkaline