About Melica frutescens Scribn.
Melica frutescens Scribn. is a perennial grass species with woody culms that measure 75โ200 centimetres (30โ79 in) in length. This species has sparse lateral branches; its leaf sheaths are scabrous, tubular, and closed. The leaf-blades of Melica frutescens are 2โ4 millimetres (0.079โ0.157 in) wide. Its panicle is contracted and linear, reaching 12โ35 centimetres (4.7โ13.8 in) in length, with filiform pedicels attached to fertile spikelets. The main panicle branches are appressed and bear oblong, solitary spikelets that are 12โ18 millimetres (0.47โ0.71 in) long. Each spikelet contains 3โ6 fertile florets, which are reduced in size toward the apex. The species' sterile florets are barren, oblong, grow in clumps, and measure 4.5โ6.5 millimetres (0.18โ0.26 in) long. The fertile lemma is chartaceous, keelless, oblong, and 8โ11 millimetres (0.31โ0.43 in) long. Both the lower and upper glumes are chartaceous, elliptical, keelless, and have acute apexes, but they differ in size: the lower glume is 7โ12 millimetres (0.28โ0.47 in) long, while the upper glume is 9โ15 millimetres (0.35โ0.59 in) long. The flowers are fleshy, oblong, truncate, grow clustered together, and have 3 anthers. The fruit is a caryopsis with an additional pericarp.