Just a pretty picture of Muhlenbergia wrightii. |
A field of dry Spike Muhly. Note the thick clumps, these over a foot in diameter. |
Closer view of seedheads. The separated basal seedhead bits are short branches, so these are not true spikes! |
These seedheads show the typical texture of Spike Muhly. There are no awns. |
This row of seedheads shows the best diagnostic feature of Spike Muhly: the basal gap(s) in the continuity of the column. |
Sometimes the seedheads are shorter. The interruption at the column base is characteristic but not ubiquitous. |
It's the interuption in the base of the seedhead! |
Spike Muhly leaves are quite short compared to many grasses. |
These massive roots show that the Spike Muhly is a perennial. |
Spike Muhly is a perennial bunchgrass. Its seedheads are usually about 2 to 6 inches long. It is not the only spike-like grass in Arizona that usually has a break or two in the seedhead, but it is the most common. The separate basal outliers are actually branches, so this is not a true spike. On true spikes all spikelets emerge directly from the rachis (the seedhead stem). Even when fresh, Spike Muhly seedheads look gray.
A person could call Spike Muhly an elongate, cylindrical puff, and I believe I will. Phleum pratense (Timothy) is similar but has no seedhead gaps. When Junegrass is in its spike-like form, before opening out to a panicle, it can have breaks in the seedhead. It is a different color and shinier, ...or you can check its longer, appressed branches.