Origin: Introduced   Season: Cool Habitat Description: Valley and foothill ranges, cultivated soil and waste places. Escapee along roadsides. Plant Communities:Disturbed Areas Elevation: 4000 - 7200 feet
Similar Species: Avena occidentalis, Avena sativaGeneral Description
Desc:
Tall, wide-leaved, quick growing grass with drooping seedheads. Considered a weed in 46 states. Identification Notes: Spikelets are mostly 3-flowered, lemma awns are bent and twisted; lemmas are long-hairy on their back; florets fall easily from the glumes. A. sativa has 2-flowered spikelets and straight awns. Grass Type: Annual Rhizomes: N Stolons: N Large Dense Clump (> 2 feet): N Bushy (highly branched): N Height with Seedheads: 24 to 36 inches Seedhead Structure: Branched - open and spreading Seedhead Droops: Y Flowering Period: Mar - Aug Flower Characteristics
Number of Flowers per Spikelet: Multi-flowered Spikelets One-sided: N Awns: Greater than 1 inch Three Awns: N Awns Bent: Y Flower and Seedhead Notes: Open, drooping and loose, branches unequal. Lemma awned from back and hairy. Awns 1 to 1-1/2 inches long and bent abruptly, spikelets mostly 3 flowered.
Vegetative Charcteristics
Blade Hairy:
N
Blade with White Margins:
N
Blade Cross section:
Flat
Blade Notes:
Roughened with stout projections on both sides, 1/4 to 1/2 inch wide and 4 to 18 inches long.
Sheath Hairy:
Y
Tuft of Hairs at top of Sheath or Collar:
N
Ligules:
Membranous Auricles (Ear-like lobes at collar area:
N
Forage Value:
Good to excellent for all classes of livestock.
Arizona Cooperative Extension
Yavapai County
840 Rodeo Dr #C
Prescott, AZ 86305
(928) 445-6590