Species: Eriophorum gracile

Slender Cotton-grass
Species

    Slender Cottongrass is a grass-like perennial with single erect stems that are 2-6 dm high and which arise from slender rhizomes. The long basal and stem leaves are only 1-2 mm wide and deeply channeled or triangular in cross-section except near the stem. The uppermost leaf has a blade that is shorter than the sheathing portion surrounding the stem. Flowers are borne in 2-5, stalked, head-like spikelets arising from the stem tips and subtended by a single green, leaf-like bract that is shorter than the inflorescence. The spikelet stalks are covered with dense, short, soft hairs. Each flower consists of numerous long, shining, white bristles at the base of the ovary and a lance-shaped, greenish black or brown scale with a slender midrib that ends well below the tip. The light brown seeds are 2-4 mm long and 3-5 times as long as wide. The mature bristles are ca. 2 cm long.

    Source: Encyclopedia of Life

    Kingdom
    Plantae
    Phylum
    Anthophyta
    Class

    Monocotyledoneae

    Order

    Cyperales

    Family

    Cyperaceae

    Genus

    Eriophorum

    Classification
    Other Global Common Names
    Slender Cottongrass - linaigrette grĂȘle - slender cottongrass
    Informal Taxonomy
    Plants, Vascular - Flowering Plants - Sedge Family
    Formal Taxonomy
    Plantae - Anthophyta - Monocotyledoneae - Cyperales - Cyperaceae - Eriophorum

    Slender Cottongrass is a grass-like perennial with single erect stems that are 2-6 dm high and which arise from slender rhizomes. The long basal and stem leaves are only 1-2 mm wide and deeply channeled or triangular in cross-section except near the stem. The uppermost leaf has a blade that is shorter than the sheathing portion surrounding the stem. Flowers are borne in 2-5, stalked, head-like spikelets arising from the stem tips and subtended by a single green, leaf-like bract that is shorter than the inflorescence. The spikelet stalks are covered with dense, short, soft hairs. Each flower consists of numerous long, shining, white bristles at the base of the ovary and a lance-shaped, greenish black or brown scale with a slender midrib that ends well below the tip. The light brown seeds are 2-4 mm long and 3-5 times as long as wide. The mature bristles are ca. 2 cm long.

    Source: Encyclopedia of Life

    NatureServe Global Status Rank
    G5
    Global Status Last Reviewed
    2006-11-28
    Global Status Last Changed
    1984-04-24
    Conservation Status Map
    <img src="http://www.natureserve.org/explorer/servlet/GetMapGif?CA.AB=S3&CA.BC=S4&CA.LB=SNR&CA.MB=S5&CA.NB=S1&CA.NF=S1&CA.NT=SNR&CA.NS=S2&CA.ON=S5&CA.PE=S1&CA.QC=S3&CA.SK=SNR&CA.YT=S1&US.AK=SNR&US.CA=S3&US.CO=S2&US.CT=SNR&US.DE=SX&US.ID=SNR&US.IL=S1&US.IN=S2&US.IA=S1&US.ME=SNR&US.MD=S1&US.MA=S2&US.MI=SNR&US.MN=SNR&US.MT=S3&US.NE=S2&US.NH=SNR&US.NJ=SNR&US.NY=S4&US.ND=S1&US.OH=SX&US.OR=SNR&US.PA=S1&US.RI=S1&US.SD=S1&US.VT=S1&US.WA=SNR&US.WI=SNR&US.WY=S2" alt="Conservation Status Map" style="width: 475px; height: auto;" />
    Global Range
    Circumboreal south to Pennsylvania, Iowa, Colorado, Idaho, and central California (Hitchcock et al. 1969). In Wyoming, it is known from the Jackson Hole area and the Beartooth Plateau.<br>
    ELEMENT_GLOBAL.2.141592