Thorneochloa
Thorneochloa is a genus of flowering plants belonging to the family Poaceae. It contains a single species, Thorneochloa diegoensis, commonly known as San Diego needlegrass. It is a perennial grass native to southern California and northern Baja California.
Description
Thorneochloa diegoensis is a bunching perennial grass with culms between tall in an erect or ascending habit. The culms are thick, and characteristically below the lower nodes the internodes have a dense pubescence of retrorse hairs. The leaf sheath may be glabrous or pubescent, and the collar with a tuft of hairs that measure long. The leaf blades are long by wide.The inflorescence, a narrow, densely-flowered panicle, is up to long, with ascending, appressed branches. The pedicels are usually shorter than the spikelets. The spikelet is lanceolate with a single fertile floret. The glumes are long. The floret and lemma are long, the lemma evenly hairy and its margins enveloping most of the palea. The lemma is 1.3 to 2 × longer than the palea, and has a long scabrous awn long that is bent twice. Flowering is typically from March to June.
Taxonomy
Thorneochloa diegoensis was first described as Stipa diegoensis by Jason Richard Swallen in 1940 based on specimens collected by Frank F. Gander in Proctor Valley. It was later transferred into the genus Achnatherum by Mary Barkworth in 1993, along with many grasses mostly segregated from Stipa as part of a new delineation of the North American Stipeae.A reorganization of the Stipeae tribe based on molecular phylogenetics by Peterson et al. in 2019 resulted in the new monotypic genus Thorneochloa and a new combination for this species, Thorneochloa diegoensis. Thorneochloa is part of a strongly-supported clade with Achnatherum that is characterized by a maize-like epidermal pattern on the lemma. The genus is named in honor of botanist Robert Folger Thorne.