Rytidosperma viride

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Rytidosperma viride
Not Threatened
Not Threatened (NZ TCS)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Clade: Commelinids
Order: Poales
Family: Poaceae
Genus: Rytidosperma
Species:
R. viride
Binomial name
Rytidosperma viride
(Zotov) Connor & Edgar

Rytidosperma viride is a flowering plant in the family Poaceae (the grass family). It is endemic to Aotearoa/New Zealand and was described as Notodanthonia viride in 1963.[1][2]

Rytidosperma viride is endemic to Aotearoa/New Zealand. In the North Island, it is found in the Volcanic Plateau, Taranaki Maunga, Raukumara, and the Coromandel Ranges, with one specimen on Te Mata peak.[3][4] In the South Island, it is found scattered in the Kahurangi National Park.[4]

The type specimen was collected by Victor Zotov, a New Zealand botanist specialising in grasses (who also described the species). It was collected in Onetapu Desert (usually called Rangipo Desert), Volcanic Plateau, on the 5th April 1931.[1]

Habitat

In Flora V, it is described as being found in rocky places in montane and subalpine zones.[4] The habitat of specimens have been described as "stony (greywacke) river flat in red tussock grassland", and "open grassland on steep hillside".[5][6]

On Mount Tarawera, R. viride is found in herbfield communities dominated by Pimelea prostrata var. prostrata, Gaultheria paniculata, G. oppositifolia, and Erica lusitanica.[7] It is also found growing in mossland dominated by Racomitrium lanuginosum, Bryum laevigatum, and Campylopus clavatus, sometimes with Raoulia glabra and R. albosericea.[8][7]

Description

Rytidosperma viride is a grass with tussocks made of short, stiff dark green leaves on branches that are intravaginal (with shoots emerging from within the sheath of the previous node). Like most Rytidosperma, there is a tuft of hairs above the ligule. The leaf-blades are up to 35cm and culms up to 45cm. Spikelets have 3-4 florets, with awned glumes. Florets contain three rows of long hairs, one on the callus (the breaking point with the spikelet), and two on the glumes. The callus hairs are long, the upper lemma hairs exceed the tip of the palea, and the upper and lower lemma hairs are equally long.[4]

It is most similar to R. gracile, R. nigricans, and R. geniculatum. From the first two, it can be distinguished by its intravaginal branching and long callus hairs that greatly overlap the lower row of lemma hairs. From the R. geniculatum, it can be distinguished by its upper and lower lemma hair rows being equally dense and continuous, and by its long, thin glumes that narrow to a point, and are tipped with a short awn.[9]

R. viride has 2n=24 chromosomes.[10]

Ecology

Rytidosperma viride is a host of the rust fungus Uromyces danthoniae, which also grows on several other Rytidosperma sp.[11]

Taxonomy

References

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