Iniciar Sesión Nueva Cuenta Mapa del Sitio
  • Inicio
  • Proyectos de Flora
    • Baja California
    • Baja California Sur
    • Chihuahua
    • Durango
    • Sinaloa
    • Sonora
    • Proyecto MABA
  • Herramientas de Búsqueda
    • Colecciones
    • Mapa
    • Browse Images
    • Listados Dinámicos
    • Claves dinámicas
  • Herbarios Participantes
    • BCMEX (Baja California)
    • HCIAD (Sinaloa)
    • HCIB (Baja California Sur)
    • CIIDIR (Durango)
    • USON (Sonora)
Tripsacum lanceolatum Rupr. ex Fourn.  
Familia: Poaceae
milpa de venado, more...zacate maiz (en: Mexican gamagrass, Mexican Mock Grama)
[Tripsacum dactyloides var. lemmonii (Vasey) Beal, moreTripsacum lemmonii Vasey]
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Liz Makings
  • FNA
  • SW Field Guide
  • Recursos
Mary E. Barkworth. Flora of North America

Plants rhizomatous. Culms 1-2 m tall, 2-4 mm thick. Lower sheaths hispid; upper sheaths essentially glabrous; ligules erose, not ciliate; blades to 100 cm long, 8-30 mm wide, glabrous or slightly pubescent. Terminal inflorescences with 4-7(10) rames. Pistillate spikelets 2-3 mm wide, beadlike in appearance. Staminate spikelets in sessile-pedicellate pairs; glumes 5-10 mm long, 1.5-2 mm wide, usually membranous, acute; pedicels 2-5 mm long, less than 0.3 mm wide, almost flat to plano-convex in cross section, flexible. 2n = 72.

Tripsacum lanceolatum grows in moist soil (often in canyon bottoms) of mountains from southeastern Arizona and southwestern New Mexico through Mexico to Guatemala. It has not been found in New Mexico since the 1800s.

FNA 2007, Gould 1980
Common Name: Mexican gamagrass Duration: Perennial Nativity: Native Lifeform: Graminoid General: Rhizomatous perennial from thick, knotty rhizomes in large clumps with stems 1-2 m tall, 2-4 mm thick. Vegetative: Lower sheaths hispid, upper essentially glabrous, blades to 1 m long, 8-30 mm wide, tapering to a slender tip, ligule a membranous collar, 1 mm, erose. Inflorescence: Spicate raceme in clusters of 4-7 rames (an inflorescence with branches bearing stalked and sessile spikelets); pistillate spikelets 2-3 mm wide, beadlike in appearance, staminate spikelets in sessile-pedicellate pairs, one sessile and one pedicellate, pedicels 2-5 mm long, less than 0.3 mm wide, flat to plano convex in cross section, glumes 5-10 mm long, 1.5-2 mm wide, membranous and acute. Ecology: Found in moist soil in canyon bottoms, at the foot of slopes and in rocky draws from 4,000-6,000 ft (1219-1829 m); flowers August-October. Notes: Very large grass, sometimes 1 m in diameter across for some clumps. A notable genus as you move south into Mexico, as it is linked closely with the genus Euchlaena (teosinte) which is known to be the progenitor of Zea mays. The thick stem and the emergence of multiple spikes right out of the sheath. Ethnobotany: Unknown Etymology: Tripsacum comes from an unknown source, while lanceolatum means lance shaped, presumably for its leaves. Synonyms: None Editor: SBuckley, 2010
Tripsacum lanceolatum
Abrir Mapa Interactivo
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
R.A. Villa
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
R.A. Villa
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Mingna Zhuang
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Tripsacum lanceolatum image
Hacer Clic para Desplegar
100 Imágenes Iniciales
- - - - -
Ver Todas las Imágenes
Este sitio es resultado de la colaboración entre los herbarios del noroeste de México y El Consorcio de SEINet. Está administrado por el Herbario de la Universidad de Sonora