Anthosachne scabra

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Anthosachne scabra
Anthosachne scabra - Joe Dillon - 360935553.jpeg
flowerhead of A. scabra
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Clade: Commelinids
Order: Poales
Family: Poaceae
Subfamily: Pooideae
Genus: Anthosachne
Species:
A. scabra
Binomial name
Anthosachne scabra
(R.Br.) Nevski (1934) [1]

Anthosachne scabra is a species of true grass of the tribe Triticeae. [2] This species is endemic to New Zealand. [3]

Contents

Description

A. scabra is an open, hairy grass with long drooping inflorescences with more-or-less straight awned spikelets. Its branching can be intravaginal and extravaginal. Culms are less than 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in), slender, and often curved. They bare up to 612 spikelets which are 40–55 mm (1.6–2.2 in) long (or 15–35 mm (0.59–1.38 in) long not including awns), each with 510 florets. The lemma bares a long, scabrid, straight awn 30–50 mm (1.2–2.0 in) long. [2] [4]

In New Zealand, A. scabra is most similar to A. solandri, from which it can be distinguished by its long, slender, curved culms; green coarsely hirsute rather than glaucous leaf-blades; and blunt, truncate to retuse palea apexes, rather than pointed bifid apexes. Its awns are normally straight, rather than recurved. [5]

Distribution

A. scabra is endemic to Australia, and is found in Queensland, Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia, New South Wales, and Western Australia. [4]

In New Zealand, A. scabra was long believed to be native, under the name Elymus rectisetus, but has more recently been recognised as naturalised, likely from grass seed imported from Australia. [6] [7] It is likely to have been a very early naturalisation, with some records dating back to 1843. [8]

In New Zealand, it is found throughout the North Island, but is rare in Waikato and Northland. In the South Island, it is found throughout, but is rare in Westland and Southland, and absent from Fiordland. [9] [6]

The type location is unknown, but was somewhere in Tasmania, likely between Recherche Bay and D'Entrecasteaux Channel to Storm Bay and the Derwent River estuary as far as Glenorchy Rivulet. [10] [11]

Habitat

A. scabra is a grass of well-drained soils, such as rocky areas, poor pastures, waste places and roadsides. [2] [9] In New Zealand, it is found from sea level to 1,250 m (4,100 ft) above sea level. [6]

In Australia, A. scabra comprises a number of more or less distinctive forms, including highly glaucous alpine and subalpine forms in Victoria. [4] In grasslands north and west of Melbourne is a form with culms that elongate up to 2 m (6 ft 7 in) long at maturity, and become almost prostrate. This form however has no distinctive floral characteristics, so is not recognised as distinct. [12]

Biology

In Australia, A. scabra flowers from September-March, and fruits from March-April. [12] A. scabra's flowers can be chasmogamous or cleistogamous, meaning it can either self-pollinate or out-cross. [6]

Natural enemies

Anther filaments can be infected with eelworms, causing them to become swollen. [6] The rust pathogen Puccinina graminis f. sp. tritici is commonly found on A. scabra in Australia, on which it can act as a reservoir for infection on nearby cultivated wheat. [13]

Pseudogamous apospory

In A. scabra, reproductive processes are highly variable between populations. In some populations, reproduction occurs entirely asexually, through pseudogamous apospory. This is where embryos are produced by nonreproductive cells in the sporophyte, but require male gametes (sperm) in order to produce the endosperm. While both eggs and sperm are used to produce the seed, it only retains the DNA of the female gamete. [14] [6]

This finding was spurred on by the initial discovery of variable chromosome numbers between wild populations. Chromosome numbers included populations with 'normal' 2n = 42, as well as 2n = 43, 2n = 63, and 2n = 57. This led to the suspicion that different populations had to be using different reproductive modes, given that individuals with irregular chromosome numbers would be incapable of ordinary meiosis. Pollination experiments were subsequently undertaken, where 1600 flowers of apomictic populations were emasculated (had anthers removed), and failed to set seed, indicating that sperm played some part in asexual reproduction. Following this, observations of the development of embryos, endosperm and the seed confirmed that despite populations being apomictic, they required sperm to produce endosperm. [14]

The four populations studied varied in their modes of reproduction:

  1. In Wellington, the population was completely sexual, with uniform chromosome numbers (2n = 42).
  2. In Foxton, the population was facultatively apomictic - as in, meisis and fertilisation was liable to fail, but could also produce productive haploid and triploid plants. This population had sexual, asexual, and semi-sexual individuals with different numbers of chromosomes.
  3. In Dunstan, the population was predominantly apomictic, where meiosis was suppressed on the female side, but not the male side.
  4. In Waiau, the population was obligately apomictic, where meiosis of both male and female sides was suppressed, resulting in entirely asexual reproduction. [14]

Taxonomy

A. scabra was originally described as Festuca scabra in 1805 by Jacques Labillardière. The location given was "capite Van-Diemen", which translates to Cape Van Diemen, [10] a general location that Labillardière lumped all of his Tasmanian collections under. At the time, Bass Strait had not been discovered by Europeans (nor was it until 1797), so the name likely comes from the assumption that Tasmania was a cape of mainland Australia. While such a location does not exist in Tasmania, he was believed to have visited somewhere in from Recherche Bay and D'Entrecasteaux Channel to Storm Bay and the Derwent River estuary. [11] However, the name Festuca scabra was already taken by another species in 1791, and is therefore Nomen illegitimum . [15]

A. scabra(R.Br.) Nevski (1934) has many synonyms. These include homotypic synonyms (those based on the same type specimen) and heterotypic synonyms (those based on different type specimens; see triple bar). These are the following, sourced from nzflora: [16]

Homotypic synonymsHeterotypic synonyms
Festuca scabra Labill. (1805) nom. illeg.Vulpia brauniana Nees (1843)
Triticum scabrum R.Br. (1810)Festuca billardierei Steud. (1854) – as Festucabillardieri
Agropyron scabrum (R.Br.) P.Beauv. (1812)Triticum youngii Hook.f., Handb. New Zealand Fl. 343 (1864)
Vulpia scabra (R.Br.) Nees (1843)
Elymus scaber (R.Br.) Á.Löve, Feddes Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. 95: 468 (1984)
Festuca brauniana (Nees) Walp. (1849)
Agropyron youngii (Hook.f.) P.Candargy (1901)
Roegneria scabra (R.Br.) J.L.Yang & C.Yen (1990)
Anthosachne australasica var. scabra (R.Br.) C.Yen & J.L.Yang, Xiao mai zu sheng wu xi tong xue 223 (2006)
A. scabra spikelets, showing straight awns Anthosachne scabra - Joe Potter Butler - 31476975.jpeg
A. scabra spikelets, showing straight awns
Blunt palea apex Anthosachne scabra - Joe Potter Butler - 174669725.jpeg
Blunt palea apex
Inflorescence Anthosachne scabra flowerhead21 Denman - Flickr - Macleay Grass Man.jpg
Inflorescence

References

  1. "Anthosachne scabra (R.Br.) Nevski". International Plant Names Index (IPNI). Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew; Harvard University Herbaria & Libraries; Australian National Botanic Gardens. 1934-04-13. Retrieved 2025-09-13.
  2. 1 2 3 Connor (2000). "Elymus rectisetus(Nees) Á.Löve & Connor".
  3. "Anthosachne scabra". New Zealand Plant Conservation Network.
  4. 1 2 3 "PlantNET - FloraOnline". plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 2025-09-12.
  5. Connor (2000). "ElymusL.".
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Connor, H. E. "Indigenous New Zealand Triticeae: Gramineae | EndNote Click". click.endnote.com. doi:10.1080/0028825x.1994.10410364&token=wzi2otu1mzesijewljewodavmdayodgynxgumtk5nc4xmdqxmdm2ncjd.6tucqfzpkyxvaym12vewrmv08fc . Retrieved 2025-09-12.
  7. "Anthosachne scabra". New Zealand Plant Conservation Network. Retrieved 2025-09-12.
  8. "Occurrence record: MEL 2336199A". The Australasian Virtual Herbarium (AVH). Retrieved 2025-09-12. Preserved specimen of Anthosachne scabra(R.Br.) Nevski | Wheatgrass recorded on 1843
  9. 1 2 "Occurrence records". The Australasian Virtual Herbarium (AVH). Retrieved 2025-09-12.
  10. 1 2 Labillardière, Jacques Julien Houton de; Labillardière, Jacques Julien Houton de (1804). Novæ Hollandiæ plantarum specimen. Vol. v.1. Parisiis: Ex typographia Dominæ Huzard.
  11. 1 2 Kantvilas, Gintaras (1983-01-01). "A brief history of lichenology in Tasmania". Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania . 117. Hobart, Tasmania: 42. doi:10.26749/RSTPP.117.41. ISSN   0080-4703. OCLC   8652211957 . Retrieved 2025-09-14.
  12. 1 2 "VicFlora: Anthosachne scabra". vicflora.rbg.vic.gov.au. Retrieved 2025-09-12.
  13. Park, R. F. (2007-06-26). "Stem rust of wheat in Australia" . Australian Journal of Agricultural Research. 58 (6): 558–566. doi:10.1071/AR07117. ISSN   1444-9838.
  14. 1 2 3 Hair, John Bruce (August 1956). "Subsexual reproduction in Agropyron". Heredity. 10 (2): 129–160. doi:10.1038/hdy.1956.15. ISSN   0018-067X.
  15. "Vascular Plants". biodiversity.org.au. Retrieved 2025-09-12.
  16. "Flora of New Zealand | Taxon Profile | Anthosachne scabra". www.nzflora.info. Retrieved 2025-09-12.