Classification
 Nomenclature
Scientific Name:
Agrostis L., Sp. Pl. 61 (1753)
 Description

Annuals or perennials, tufted, or widely creeping and rhizomatous or stoloniferous. Leaf-sheath rounded. Ligule membranous. Leaf-blade flat or involute. Culm of various height, erect, or decumbent and geniculately ascending; nodes glabrous. Inflorescence a diffuse and often delicately branched or contracted panicle, sometimes spike-like, rarely much reduced and hidden among leaves; rachis persistent at maturity. Spikelets small, numerous to few, 1-flowered; disarticulation above glumes; rachilla usually not prolonged. Glumes equal to subequal, lanceolate, acute to acuminate, sometimes subobtuse, membranous, shining, 1-nerved, keel ± scabrid. Lemma usually < glumes, thinner in texture than glumes, hyaline to firmly membranous, broadly ovate, usually truncate to dentate, rounded, 3–5–(7)-nerved with nerves sometimes excurrent, awnless or with a dorsal awn. Palea hyaline, 2-keeled or nerveless, usually < lemma, sometimes very small or obsolete, almost covered by inrolled margins of lemma. Callus short or minute, blunt, glabrous, or with ± minute lateral tufts of hairs. Lodicules 2, lanceolate, hyaline. Stamens 3. Ovary glabrous; styles distinct, free to base, short; stigmas 2, plumose. Caryopsis ovoid or fusiform, ± dorsally compressed, longitudinally grooved or rarely terete; embryo small; hilum punctiform or elongate; endosperm sometimes liquid. Chasmogamous (N.Z. spp.).

[From: Edgar and Connor (2000) Flora of New Zealand. Volume 5 (second printing).]

 Biostatus
Indigenous (Non-endemic)
Number of species in New Zealand within Agrostis L.
CategoryNumber
Indigenous (Endemic)8
Indigenous (Non-endemic)2
Exotic: Fully Naturalised4
Exotic: Casual1
Total15
 Bibliography
Edgar, E.; Forde, M. B. 1991: Agrostis in New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Botany 29: 139–161.
Linnaeus, C. 1753: Species Plantarum. Impensis Laurentii Salvii, Stockholm.
Mabberley, D.J. 2008: Mabberley's plant book, a portable dictionary of plants, their classification and uses. Edition 3. Cambridge University Press.