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perennial

Pleuropogon hooverianus (L.D. Benson) J.T. Howell

Pleuropogon hooverianus (L.D. Benson) J.T. Howell

Pleuropogon hooverianus
Photo: Bart and Susan Eisenberg · CC BY 3.0

Pleuropogon hooverianus (L.D. Benson) J.T. Howell. Pleuropogon hooverianus is a rare species of grass known by the common name North Coast semaphoregrass. It is endemic to northern California, where it is known from Mendocino, Marin, and Sonoma Counties. It grows in moist marshy areas and shady redwood forests. It is an erect perennial grass growing to a maximum height between one and 1.6 meters. The inflorescence bears widely spaced narrowly cylindrical spikelets which hang sideways off the stem, resembling semaphore signals. Each spikelet may be up to 4.5 centimeters long and may contain up to 16 flowers.

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Pleuropogon hooverianus (L.D. Benson) J.T. Howell — seeds, tools & books

Native range

Native range not recorded for this plant. Often a non-native cultivar or naturalized garden plant.

Sources