Stipa tirsa
Stipa tirsa is a species of perennial grass native to Europe and temperate Asia. Culms are 40–100 cm long; leaf blades are filiform, involute, and 1–2 mm wide.
Description
S. tirsa is a perennial, tuft-forming grass with culms 40–100 cm tall. Leaf-sheaths are glabrous, ligules short, and blades filiform, involute, 1–2 mm wide, puberulous and hairy beneath, with attenuate tips. The inflorescence is a contracted, linear panicle subtended at the base by a leaf. Spikelets are solitary, pedicelled, and 50–65 mm long, each with a single fertile floret and disarticulating at maturity. Glumes are lance-shaped, pointed, membranous, and longer than the florets. The fertile lemma is elliptic, 18–20 mm long, pubescent in lines, convolute around the inner bract, and terminates in a single awn. The awn is bent twice, 350–500 mm long, with a twisted column and feathery limb. The inner bract equals the lemma in length, 2-veined. Flowers have three small scales, three smooth-tipped anthers, and two stigmas; the ovary is glabrous. The fruit is a grain with adherent outer layer and a linear narrow scar.Distribution and Habitat
According to Plants of the World Online, Stipa tirsa is native to parts of Europe and Asia, occurring from the Iberian Peninsula eastwards to Siberia.| Region | Country/Areas |
| Balkans | Albania; Bulgaria; Northwest Balkan Peninsula |
| Central Europe | Austria; Czechia–Slovakia; Germany; Hungary |
| Southern Europe | France; Italy; Romania; Spain |
| Eastern Europe | Ukraine; Krym ; European Russia |
| Caucasus | North Caucasus; Transcaucasus |
| Western Asia | Türkiye |
| Central Asia | Kazakhstan; West Siberia |
Synonyms
- Stipa stenophylla Trautv.