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Bromus diandrus
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Bromus diandrus is a species of known by the common names great brome and "".


Description
This is a which is native to the Mediterranean but has been introduced to much of the rest of the world. It does best in areas with a Mediterranean climate, such as California and parts of southern Australia, but it is quite tolerant of many climates. Ripgut brome is a winter annual that grows throughout winter and spring and matures in the summer. The adult plant is one to three feet in height with hairy, rough leaves about a centimeter wide. The membranous is prominent, white with spiky hairs. The wide nods like that of an plant, and it bears a large, splayed spikelet with a very long awn which can exceed five centimeters in length. The seeds easily break out of the spikelet. They are very sharp and very rough due to tiny barb-like hairs that face backward, allowing the seed to catch and lodge-like a . This characteristic makes the seeds a danger to animals, which can easily get a seed lodged in a paw or eye. Motion can cause the seed to work itself deeper into the flesh. This is one of the grass species known to pet owners as "foxtails", a backyard hazard for outdoor cats and dogs.


As an Invasive species
Ripgut brome can substantially reduce yields when it invades wheat fields. It has naturalized in some areas and is considered a troublesome in others. Bromus diandrous is an in . This bromegrass is a troublesome weed in cereal crops and natural pasture lands. The life cycle of B. diandrous helps it to grow in wheat fields in which it can grow for most of the season without being noticed. Once the grass starts flowering, the open seed head shows the infestation.[1] Dastgheib F. & Poole N. 2010. Seed biology of bromegrass weeds (Bromus diandrous and B. hordeaceus) and effects of land management. New Zealand Plant Protection 63: 78-83 The damage to wheat crop is through both strong competition, lowering yield, and seed contamination, lowering quality. Ripgut brome is also troublesome in rangeland if it establishes in high numbers. The grass is of low nutritional value to livestock. Brome seeds can also mix with sheep wool and lower its value. Moreover, sharp awns of ripe seeds can penetrate sheep's skin into the flesh causing pain and lowering carcass value. If ingested, the strong awns can cause injury to sheep's mouth and even intestine,Edgar E. & Connor H.E. 2000. Flora of New Zealand, Vol. V, Grasses. P. 362-8 hence the name "rip gut".


Similar species
, known as rigid brome, is very similar in morphology to ripgut brome but differs from the latter in its panicle structure and the callus-scar of its . The two species have some differences in their germination behaviour as well.Kleemann S. G. L. & Gill G. S. 2008. Differences in the distribution and seed germination behaviour of populations of Bromus rigidus and Bromus diandrus in South Australia: adaptations to habitat and implications for weed management. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 57(2) 213–219 doi:10.1071/AR05200 , or sterile brome, is similar in most morphological features. It is a slightly smaller plan, an annual or a biennial plant. Bromus hordeaceus, known as soft brome, is similar in early growth stages with smaller leaf blades. The seed head is an erect panicle, smaller than B. diandrus with much smaller seeds and much shorter awns.


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