Smut Grass (Sporobolus indicus)
 
    Smut Grass Species Description
 
    This species includes one or more native variety (or subspecies) to North America AND one or more introduced variety (or subspecies).
    Allergenicity: No allergy has been reported for Smut Grass (Sporobolus indicus) species.
    Pollination:  Occurs in following seasons depending on latitude and elevation: all year long.
    Angiosperm - Flowering Monocot: Plants in this group have one embryonic leave (single cotyledon). This group include the grasses, lilies, orchids and palms.
    
    
    Forb: A broad-leaved herb other than a grass, especially one growing in a field, prairie, or meadow.
    
    Grass/Grass-like: Any plant characterized by parallel-veined leaves that arise from nodes in the stem, wrap around it for a distance, and leave, especially those grown as ground cover rather than for grain.
    Weed: Any plant growing in cultivated ground to the injury of the crop or desired vegetation, or to the disfigurement of the place; an unsightly, useless, or injurious plant.
    
    Annual: Plants in which the entire life cycle is completed within one growing season.
    
    Perennial: Living for many years.
    
    
    
        
    
    Wetland Plant: Plants growing in aquatic or wetland habitats. These include all known floating, submerged, and emergent taxa, plus those that are found in permanently or seasonally wet habitats.
        
    
    
    
    Herbaceous Stem: Not woody, lacking lignified tissues.
        
    
    Smut Grass Species Usage
 
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    Related Links
 
    
    More Smut Grass (Sporobolus indicus) imagesby Jessie M. Harris from BONAP
 
                    
                






 
                        

