Bromus catharticus


Bromus catharticus is a species of brome grass known by the common names rescue grass, prairie grass, and Schrader's bromegrass in English, and cebadilla criolla and cebadilla in Spanish.
It is the most common and most well-known of several species in the Bromus catharticus complex within the Bromus section Ceratochloa, all of which are hexaploids with the chromosome count 2n=42.
It is native to South America but it can be found in other places, including Europe, Australia and North America, as an introduced species.

Description

Bromus catharticus is a coarse winter annual or biennial grass, growing in height. The culms of the grass are glabrous and thick. The sheaths are densely hairy. The grass lacks auricles and the glabrous ligule is long. The leaf blades are long and wide and are glabrous or pubescent. The erect or nodding panicles are long. The upper spikelets are erect and the lower spikelets are nodding or drooping. Each flat and pointed spikelet is long and has four to twelve florets. The glumes are smooth or occasionally slightly scabrous. The lower glume is fie to seven-veined and long, and the upper glume is seven to nine-veined and long. The lemmas are scabrous or nearly glabrous and lack awns or possess very short awns in length. The lemmas are long. The palea is over half the length of the lemma. The anthers are long.
Bromus catharticus is part of Bromus section Ceratochloa, which are separated from other Bromus sections by their strongly keeled lemmas, which make the spikelets laterally-compressed.

Similar species

B. catharticus is likely to be confused with B. cebadilla, ''B. brevis, and possibly the B. carinatus group.''
B. cebadilla has often been reduced to a synonym of B. catharticus. However, it can be distinguished by its wide spikelets, scabrid or glabrous rather than lightly hairy glumes, and shorter awns.
Like B. cebadilla, B. brevis was once regarded a synonym of B. catharticus. It can be distinguished by its longer awns, longer pedicels, and less compact panicle.
From the B. carinatus group, B. catharticus can be distinguished by its wider spikelets, and its having 9-11 veins on its lemmas rather than 7.

Distribution

Bromus catharticus is native to most of South America.
It is widely introduced and naturalised in:
Bromus catharticus grows in open and disturbed areas, such as roadsides, parks, gardens, orchards, vineyards, ditches. In Australia, it can additionally be found in some natural habitats, such as coastal vegetation, heathlands, grasslands, grassy woodlands, open woodlands, and riparian.

Biology

Like most species in Bromus section Ceratochloa, B. ''catharticus flowers both through chasmogamy and cleistogamy, with each kind of flower existing on the same spikelet. Chasmogamous flowering is induced by short photoperiod and high soil moisture. In Argentina, B. catharticus flowers cleistogamously before flowering chasmogamously.
B. catharticus naturally spreads through attachment to animals. However, it is often spread through contaminated agricultural produce, or through attachment to vehicles, clothing, or equipment. It can produce an average of 1000 seeds/m2, which can remain viable in the soil for up to three years.
In Australia,
B. catharticus'' flowers in Spring and Summer, and seeds germinate from Autumn to Spring.

Uses

Bromus catharticus is commonly used as a pasture grass in areas with warm and temperate climate.

Etymology

Bromus - from the Greek bromos, out of broma.
catharticus - from the Latin catharticus, meaning to purge. This refers to the plant having emetic properties.