Melica aristata
Melica aristata is a species of grass known by the common names awned melic and bearded melicgrass.
Melica aristata | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Monocots |
Clade: | Commelinids |
Order: | Poales |
Family: | Poaceae |
Subfamily: | Pooideae |
Genus: | Melica |
Species: | M. aristata |
Binomial name | |
Melica aristata | |
Distribution
It is native to the western United States from the Pacific Northwest to the Sierra Nevada and nearby ranges, where it grows in mountain forests and open hillsides.
Description
Melica aristata is a rhizomatous perennial grass growing up to 1.2 metres (3.9 ft) tall. The inflorescence is a narrow series of cylindrical spikelets. Each spikelet has an awn up to 1.2 centimeters long, the characteristic which distinguishes it from the other melics.[1]
gollark: > >>So they wrote a program that was a) shitty and b) memory-safe? Those are two orthogonal dimensions.Wow, this is extremely.
gollark: It generalizes fine to other tasks, as long as you precompute them utterly and can save them.
gollark: There's a startup experimenting with using on-chip flash to store glxgears frames and just streaming them to the display as needed, to avoid the overhead of having to actually compute it.
gollark: They have for a while had glxgears acceleration instructions in the shader processors, but Intel's full acceleration approach may prove better.
gollark: Apparently Intel's upcoming gaming GPUs have dedicated glxgears hardware for generating the rotating gear meshes.
References
- Grass Manual Treatment Archived 2011-06-11 at the Wayback Machine
External links
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