Sisyrinchium pruinosum
Sisyrinchium pruinosum, the dotted blue-eyed grass, is a perennial plant in the family Iridaceae, native to the south-central United States. There are also reports of the plant in California, but these appear to represent naturalizations. It is sometimes considered to be a synonym of Sisyrinchium langloisii.
Description
- Plant: Upright or scrawling, clumped, delicate, smooth perennial 3.5-12 in. high; stems slender, usually several, unbranched, flattened, not conspicuously winged as in some species.
- Flower: up to 1.125 in. across, violet-purple to purple-blue, rarely white, the 6 segments all appearing petal-like, wide-spreading. Flowers usually 1 or a few in cluster at tip of stem, closing during overcast weather.
- Leaves: up to 9 in. long,.125 in. wide, basal, slender, grasslike and flattened like flower stem
- Habitat: Clay or sandy clay in open prairies, pastures, meadows, open woodlands and oak uplands.