Culms (1)4-15 cm, scabrous or puberulent; peduncles (internode
below the panicles) 3-7(11) cm. Sheaths striate, margins scarious; ligules
3-5 mm; blades (1)2-6 cm, abaxial surfaces scabrous, adaxial surfaces
scabridulous. Panicles 1-2.5 cm long, 1-1.5 cm wide, densely
white-pubescent, light green or purple-tinged. Spikelets (5)6-9(10)
mm, with (4)6-10 florets.
Lower glumes 6-8.5 mm; upper glumes 6.5-9 mm, as long as
or longer than the florets; lemmas 3-5.5 mm, lobes (1)3-3.2 mm,
midveins extending into straight (1.5)2.5-4 mm awns; paleas 2-3.5
mm, keels long pilose proximally, ciliate distally; anthers 0.2-0.5
mm. Caryopses 1-1.5
mm, translucent. 2n = 16.
Dasyochloa pulchella grows in rocky soils of arid regions.Its range extends
from the western United States southward to central Mexico. It is the most common
grass in the Larrea-Flourensia scrub of the southwestern United
States and adjacent Mexico.
FNA 2003, Gould 1988
Common Name: low woollygrass Duration: Perennial Nativity: Native Lifeform: Graminoid General: Dwarf, tufted perennial, can appear annual; numerous stems, 5-14 cm, wiry, mainly of single elongated internode bearing clustered fascicle of leaves and spikelets at apex; occasionally a fascicle bends over to the ground and takes root. Vegetative: Blades 1-5 cm long, 0.5 mm wide, involute, the margins firm and often white; ligule a low ciliate fringe less than 0.5 mm long; sheath open, striate, the margins ciliate; collar glabrous except for long marginal hairs. Inflorescence: Compact and dense, capitate clusters of sessile or short-pediceled spikelets, exceeded in length by subtending leaf blades; spikelets 7-13 mm long, 6-12 flowered, glumes subequal, acuminate, scarious, with a green midvein, as long as the spikelet but spreading; glumes and lemmas papery, sometimes purple-tinged; lemmas 3-5 mm, densely pilose with long hairs on each of the 3 green veins, tip deeply 2-lobed with stout awn 1-2 mm long between lobes. Ecology: Dry, rocky slopes and flats below 6,000 ft (1829 m); flowers summer and fall. Distribution: c to s CA, east to c CO, south through most of AZ, NM, w TX; south to c MEX. Notes: Dasyochloa is a monotypic genus (one species) endemic to North America. It is especially common and can be a dominant in southwest deserts. It is a fairly distinct dwarf bunchgrass to 15 cm tall, often with long, stiff, sometimes arching runners producing new plants, sometimes in mid air; the densely packed panicles are subtended by leafy bracts and spikelets are dense with hairs which can appear to be bursting from inflorescences. The tufts of hairs can give the tops of plants a white, snowy appearance, especially late in the season. Early season new leaves are often covered with white cobwebby fluff which easily falls off. One of the most hardy of the small perennial grasses, it responds to very little rainfall and is often found on overgrazed or denuded soils. Munroa squarrosa has a similar dwarf tufted growth form with elevated clusters of leaves and spikelets; however, M. squarrosa lacks the wooly tufts of hairs in the spikelets, and it is annual while D. pulchella is perennial. Ethnobotany: Havasupai used a decoction of the leaves as a laxative. Etymology: Dasyochloa is from the Greek dasys, shaggy, and chloa, grass, referring to the wooly spikelets; pulchella is derived from the Latin for beautiful. Synonyms: Erioneuron puchellum, Tridens pulchellus, Triodia pulchella Editor: SBuckley 2010, FSCoburn 2014, AHazelton 2015