Description:
This
perennial grass is 1½-3' tall, forming a dense erect tuft of
flowering culms. Straw-colored remnants of older leaves and culms
are usually present while new leaves and culms are developing. Culms of
the current year are light to medium green, glabrous or hairy, and
terete to slightly flattened; they are largely hidden by the sheaths.
Each culm is unbranched below, but it develops short branching culms
above where the inflorescence occurs. Alternate leaves occur along the
entire length of the culm, although they are more common below. The
leaf blades are 3-12" long and 2-7 mm. across; they are erect,
ascending, or widely spreading. The leaf blades are dull light to
medium green and mostly glabrous, except toward their bases,
where long hairs usually occur along their upper sides
or margins. Leaf sheaths are dull light to medium green, somewhat
inflated, somewhat flattened, and open; they are usually glabrous,
although some long hairs may occur along their sides and upper margins.
The
upper secondary culms develop clusters of 2-4 racemes of spikelets.
Individual racemes are ¾-1½" long, erect or ascending, and
partially hidden by their sheaths. Along the rachis of each raceme,
there are several pairs of spikelets. Each pair of spikelets consists
of a sessile spikelet (3-4 mm. long) with a perfect
floret and a short pedicel (4-5 mm. long) with
an empty (or missing) spikelet; sometimes an awn-like scale (less than
0.5 mm. long) is present at the apex of the pedicel. Each pedicel is
covered with long white hairs. At the base of the sessile spikelet,
there is a small tuft of white hairs. The sessile spikelet consists of
a linear-lanceolate glume, a linear-lanceolate lemma with an awn,
and a membranous palea enclosing one side of the floret. Both the glume
and lemma are keeled. The slender awn of the
lemma is 8-20 mm. long, straight or slightly curved, and not twisted
nor sharply bent
toward the base. The perfect floret consists of an ovary with a pair of
feathery stigmata and a single stamen. The blooming period occurs
during late summer or early
fall for about 1-2 weeks. The florets are wind-pollinated. Afterwards,
fertile florets are replaced by elongated grains about 2.5-3.0 mm.
long; the latter are blown about to some extent by the wind. The root
system consists of a dense crown of fibrous roots.
Cultivation: The
preference is full sun, dry conditions, and a barren soil
containing clay, sand, gravel, or rocky material. However, partial sun
and more mesic conditions are also tolerated. The dried-out foliage of
this grass remains erect and persists throughout the winter into the
summer of the following year. This warm-season grass has a C4
metabolism, enabling it to withstand hot dry weather. Most growth and
development occurs during the summer and early fall. There is some
evidence that the decayed foliage is phytotoxic.
Range
&
Habitat: The native Broom Sedge is occasional to locally
common in the
southern half of Illinois and in the NE section of the state (see
Distribution
Map).
The range of this grass may be slowly expanding
northward. Habitats include hill prairies, upland sand prairies, upland
clay prairies, upland savannas, upland sandy savannas, rocky glades,
sandy or gravelly areas along railroads, pastures, abandoned sandy
fields, open areas of parks, mined land, and barren waste
areas. This grass tends to colonize open areas with infertile soil that
have been subjected to a history of disturbance, whether from
occasional wildfires, grazing, or other causes. Because the dried-out
older foliage of this grass is so persistent, it increases the risk of
ground fires in some habitats substantially.
Faunal
Associations: Various insects feed on Broom Sedge. These
insects
include the leafhoppers
Stirellus
bicolor and
Polyamia
caperata, the
piglet bugs
Bruchomorpha
dorsata and
Bruchomorpha
jocosa, the scale
insect
Aclerda
andropogonis, the thrips
Plesiothrips andropogoni
and
Eurythrips hindsi,
the
leaf beetles
Chaetocnema
denticulata and
Myochrous
denticollis,
Sphenophorus destructor
(Destructive Billbug), caterpillars of
Hesperia
metea (Cobweb Skipper), and
Dissosteira carolina
(Carolina
Grasshopper). Because of the persistence of the dried-out foliage
throughout the winter and into the summer of the following year, this
bunchgrass provides shelter for various insects during the winter. It
also provides cover and nesting habitat for the Bobwhite Quail, Greater
Prairie Chicken, and other wildlife. Birds eating the seeds of Broom
Sedge during the winter include the Slate-Colored Junco, Field Sparrow,
and Tree Sparrow. The young foliage of this grass is palatable to
cattle, deer, buffalo, and other hoofed mammalian herbivores, although
older foliage declines in value as a source of forage.
Photographic
Location: An open grassy area of a park in Vermilion
County, Illinois,
and a degraded prairie at Parkland College in Champaign, Illinois.
Comments: The most striking aspect of Broom Sedge is the
persistence of
its dried straw-colored foliage. This foliage tends to stand out from
the background as this grass prefers habitats that are relatively
barren. The common name, 'Broom Sedge,' is somewhat misleading because
this species is a grass (Poaceae), rather than a sedge (Cyperaceae).
The 'broom' in the common name refers to the fact that the culms were
used to make brooms in some of the southern states. Another common name
that is occasionally used for this species is 'Whiskey Grass.' It is
possible to confuse Broom Sedge with some closely related species of
grass, but they are restricted to southern Illinois and areas further
south. These species include
Andropogon
glomeratus (Bushy Broom
Sedge),
Andropogon
ternarius (Silver Broom Sedge), and
Andropogon gyrans
(Elliott's Broom Sedge). As compared to Broom Sedge,
Bushy Broom Sedge has a more bushy inflorescence with wider spikelets
(exceeding ¾" across). The spikelets of Silver Broom
Sedge are more heavily covered with silver hairs, its sessile spikelets
are longer (5-6 mm. in length), and each of its florets has 3 stamens,
rather than a single stamen. Elliott's Broom Sedge can be distinguished
by its upper sheaths that are more swollen and copper-colored, its
racemes of spikelets that are mostly enclosed by these sheaths, and
awns that are twisted or bent near their bases.