A Call to Grass

Hi everyone,

I stumbled over this observation https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/28990168 of Cynosurus cristatus yesterday, which @bobwardell helped to identify. In checking the stats on the taxa page https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/76581-Cynosurus-cristatus I found that we have only 12 observations in Germany so far, though wikipedia says it is a quite common grass, though locally listed as endangered. But looking at the GBIF data points in the map, it seems it should not be so difficult to get some more observations of it at iNat, though it seems to be advantageous to explore in Bavaria.

Digging a bit further in Poaceae it seems that many grass species are way too overlooked in general.

Poaceae observations in Germany: ~ 3000 observations with 161 different species sounds maybe not to bad. But a big chunk of them are not surprisingly Phragmites australis (266) and some others, and many, I assume, unidentified deeper than Poaceae:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?locale=de&place_id=7207&preferred_place_id=7207&subview=grid&taxon_id=47434&view=species

So I would like to give a Call to Grass for some of them (completely arbitrarily chosen ;-), their visuals seem catchy enough to remember them), which hopefully raises other Poaceae observation counters as well.

Any additions to the list, especially from a more expert point of view, are welcome!

Happy exploring!
Monika

Posted on 12 de fevereiro de 2020, 07:07 PM by mobbini mobbini

Comentários

I have some unidentified grasses. But no idea to identify them...

Publicado por martingrimm cerca de 4 anos antes

me two :-/ in the list I therefor tried to pick some that could at least be guessed, though expert confirmation would be needed

Publicado por mobbini cerca de 4 anos antes

The first three I already found in Vienna. Cynosurus cristatus is even growing in front of my flat at a construction site :-)

Publicado por carnifex cerca de 4 anos antes

Ha! :-) Yes, the documentation in Austria looks much better! 9 observations from a smaller country.

Publicado por mobbini cerca de 4 anos antes

💪🏼

Publicado por carnifex cerca de 4 anos antes

Hi Monika et. al. Had a think about your challenge and have a couple of thoughts - quality of photos!!!, number of photos!!! and diagnostic features!!! and common species that everyone should learn to start off with.
Do not submit rubbish photos!!
Focus focus focus!!
Photos of 1. habit 2. Panicle. 3. spikelet, 4. ligule, 5. culm, 6. sheath - ie. the diagnostic features - often need at least 3 to get a good chance of id.
Everyone should know these common species

Lolium perenne
Elymus repens
Dactylis glomerata
Poa annua
Arrhenatherum elatius
Holcus lanatus
Phleum pratense

Cheers to you all and have a happy recording season for 2020 and do not forget - better photos!!!!

Publicado por bobwardell cerca de 4 anos antes

Hi Bob, many thanks for your motivational reminder to focus and helpful hints what is needed to ID grasses! I think we all, each time we are heading out, start aiming not to forget to document those diagnostic features (as fas as we know or assume them), but once out in nature it is not so easy not to loose focus – there is always so much other nature around :-)
Cheerful recording season to you as well!

Publicado por mobbini cerca de 4 anos antes

here is an image from wikipedia regarding the mentioned diagnostic features:
Qries

Publicado por mobbini cerca de 4 anos antes

This is very helpful -- thanks Bob for the useful hints what to look for and mobbini for the corresponding sketch. I don't know anything about grasses at all and had actually planned to change that for this year. So now I already know a little better what I should pay attention to :)

Publicado por jansson cerca de 4 anos antes

yeah! Looking forward to many grass observations with diagnostic features. And maybe by end of the year we can interprete some of them. :-)

Publicado por mobbini cerca de 4 anos antes

@bobwardell can you have a look at this obs https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/40660413? Is it Sesleria caerulea?

Publicado por mobbini cerca de 4 anos antes

Checked! should be much more records for central Germany http://www.floraweb.de/webkarten/karte.html?taxnr=23996

Publicado por bobwardell cerca de 4 anos antes

Thank you ... now they are 6, yes, there sure is still "air to the top" (How to translate "Luft nach oben"?)

Publicado por mobbini cerca de 4 anos antes

'room to improvement' or 'room to the upside'? 🤓

Publicado por carnifex cerca de 4 anos antes

room for improvement! please! hahaha!

Publicado por bobwardell cerca de 4 anos antes

:-) well I will blend it a bit and take "air for improvement"

Publicado por mobbini cerca de 4 anos antes

... thinking again at it, interesting, room & air is more similar than I got first, as "room" usually is filled with air

Publicado por mobbini cerca de 4 anos antes

FYO - It is not a room in the sense of in a house, it is room (space/area) to move around in - although air still may play some strange part in that - Ha!

Publicado por bobwardell cerca de 4 anos antes

I would argue that in this sense most "room" (space) is not filled with air. In the universe, that is.

Publicado por jansson cerca de 4 anos antes

so we have room for vacuum then :-)

Publicado por mobbini cerca de 4 anos antes

... or space for vacuum ...

Publicado por mobbini cerca de 4 anos antes

but that is OK for 'Raum' but not necessarily for a parking space 'Parkplatz'

Publicado por bobwardell cerca de 4 anos antes

I see. ... english is so complicated^^ :)

Publicado por mobbini cerca de 4 anos antes

You think that !- you should try to learn German ! HaHa!

Publicado por bobwardell cerca de 4 anos antes

:-) maybe some day

Publicado por mobbini cerca de 4 anos antes

I'm just preparing for a woodland excursion, and I'll try and get the necessary photos in case I find one of the target species.

Publicado por alexis_orion quase 4 anos antes

Great news @alexis_orion. Wood Millet is really everywhere in the wood round here, it is really odd that it is so rarely observed on iNat. Wish you good luck, and times with pausing wind, for easily focused shots :-)

Publicado por mobbini quase 4 anos antes

special recommendation came in by @bobwardell along with this observation https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/48171112 of https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/75381-Alopecurus-aequalis: "a small only 15cm high grass in wet marginal freshwater habitats such as edges of ponds, ditches, wet meadows, reservoirs and gravel pits". We are in the best time to recognise it, as "its unique orange anthers are out now".

Note for Leipzig: I just checked the little "pond" in the Rosental. Seems it is not wetland enough any more, no Alopecurus aequalis has been there.

Publicado por mobbini quase 4 anos antes

It is quite common in De in the right habitat https://karten.deutschlandflora.de/map.phtml?config=taxnr329&resetsession=allGroups&PHPSESSID=ieik3k9p64qil3pl2qafqhno54 - I found it last week on the gravels surrounding a disused gravel pit (Kiesegrube) but competing vegetation must be low or the surface recently disturbed https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/47843559

Publicado por bobwardell quase 4 anos antes

Never seen that species. In Vienna it is quite rare, but if I look for it at the right spots I might see it. One location seems to be not that far from my home

Publicado por carnifex quase 4 anos antes

good luck!

Publicado por mobbini quase 4 anos antes

I found it the other day (I think)!
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/50174183

Publicado por alexis_orion quase 4 anos antes

to me it looks good, though I do not know enough for ID! :-) cool

Publicado por mobbini quase 4 anos antes

Adicionar um Comentário

Iniciar Sessão ou Registar-se to add comments