Summary[edit] Description: Flowerheads are spatheate and to 1.3 m long. Date: 4 July 2011, 09:54. Source: Themeda quadrivalvis flowerhead3. Author: Harry Rose from South West Rocks, Australia.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Spikelets of Red grass at Skeerpoort on the southern slope of the Magaliesberg, South Africa. Date: 26 December 2013, 14:37. Source: Own work. Author: JMK.
Summary[edit] Description: Spathes often with tubercle-based hairs along the margins of the lower third of the blade. Involucral spikelets usually with tubercle-based hairs on the upper two thirds of the back. Date: 4 July 2011, 09:52. Source: Themeda quadrivalvis spikelets2. Author: Harry Rose from South West Rocks, Australia.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Photographed at the Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney (Australia) in January. Date: 12 January 2011, 20:43:53. Source: http://Gardenology.org. Author: Raffi Kojian. Permission(Reusing this file): See attribution information.
Summary[edit] Description: Spathes often with tubercle-based hairs along the margins of the lower third of the blade. Involucral spikelets usually with tubercle-based hairs on the upper two thirds of the back. Date: 4 July 2011, 09:53. Source: Themeda quadrivalvis spikelets3. Author: Harry Rose from South West Rocks, Australia.
Summary[edit] Description: Flowerheads are spatheate and to 1.3 m long. Date: 4 July 2011, 09:51. Source: Themeda quadrivalvis flowerhead1. Author: Harry Rose from South West Rocks, Australia.
Summary[edit] Description: When travelling down the south coast of NSW, I noticed Kangaroo Grass which had tubercle-based hairs in the flowerhead. This doesn't occur in any samples I've looked at on the north coast of NSW. This patch was growing on a graded roadside on George Bass Drive, 200m south of final roundabout exiting the southern end of Malua Bay. The site had a northwest facing gentle slope and was dominated by this tubercle-haired form of the grass, with little else present up to the edge of the forest (on the other side of the fence). Soil was a gravelly pale clay (probably subsoil). The grass was erect, 70cm tall and pulled up easily. Tubercle-based hairs were abundant. Date: 16 December 2010, 11:47. Source: Themeda triandra with tubercle-hairs3. Author: Harry Rose from South West Rocks, Australia.
Summary[edit] Description: Kangaroo Grass growing on the edge of the Old Hume Highway, 50m south of Balaclava St intersection, Willow Vale (which is 3km north east from the centre of Mittagong, NSW, 2575). Substrate was a graded gravelly artificial bank. Site was at the edge of a disturbed stringy bark forest, with Dactylis glomerata, Rytidosperma and Themeda triandra (greater than 100 plants). Kangaroo Grass was erect, 95 cm tall and pulled up easily. Tubercle-based hairs on each glume were abundant. Date: 18 December 2010, 15:42. Source: Themeda triandra with tubercle-hairs31. Author: Harry Rose from South West Rocks, Australia.
Summary[edit] Description: Introduced, warm-season, erect, annual or short-lived perennial to 2 m tall. A native of Malesia, it grows in disturbed sites, especially roadsides - rare on the North Coast. Date: 4 July 2011, 10:28. Source: Themeda quadrivalvis habit5. Author: Harry Rose from South West Rocks, Australia.
Summary[edit] Description: Flowerheads are spatheate panicles, containing clusters of 7 spikelets enclosed by a spathe. Clusters consist of a central fertile spikelet with a long thick (0.4-0.5 mm wide) black awn, surrounded by 6 male or barren, awnless spikelets; 4 are unstalked (6-12 mm long) and 2 stalked. The upper half of the glumes of the unstalked spikelets vary from hairless (mostly northern and western NSW) to densely covered with glandular hairs (most common in south east NSW). These very hairy samples were photographed at Mt Annan in Sydney. Date: 12 July 2011, 12:10. Source: Themeda triandra spikelets15. Author: Harry Rose from South West Rocks, Australia.
Summary[edit] Description: Flowerheads are spatheate panicles, containing clusters of 7 spikelets enclosed by a spathe. Clusters consist of a central fertile spikelet with a long thick (0.4-0.5 mm wide) black awn, surrounded by 6 male or barren, awnless spikelets; 4 are unstalked (6-12 mm long) and 2 stalked. The upper half of the glumes of the unstalked spikelets vary from hairless (mostly northern and western NSW) to densely covered with glandular hairs (most common in south east NSW). Date: 10 April 2006, 15:02. Source: Themeda triandra spikelets12. Author: Harry Rose from South West Rocks, Australia.
Summary[edit] Description: Spathes often with tubercle-based hairs along the margins of the lower third of the blade. Involucral spikelets usually with tubercle-based hairs on the upper two thirds of the back. Date: 4 July 2011, 11:00. Source: Themeda quadrivalvis spikelets6. Author: Harry Rose from South West Rocks, Australia.