Bulbous Bluegrass, Bulbous Bluegrass
Poa bulbosa ssp. vivipara
The photo above shows the bulbils that bulbous bluegrass is named after. These are examples of vegetative reproduction. Photographed along Kreps Lane in Conboy Lake NWR........June 21, 2008.
The photo above shows part of the inflorescence of bulbous bluegrass. Photographed along Kreps Lane in Conboy Lake NWR.........June 21, 2008.
A close-up of the inflorescence of bulbous bluegrass as seen at Catherine Creek in the Columbia River Gorge.......May 10, 2009. The dark bulbils or propagules can easily be seen.
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Close-ups of the bulbils (sprouting in this case) which give bulbous bluegrass its common name. The bulbils drop to the ground, develop roots as they sprout and begin to mature. Photographed on a rocky basalt slope along the McCord Creek Trail in the western Columbia River Gorge..........May 20, 2009.
A close-up of one branch of the inflorescence of bulbous bluegrass as seen at Catherine Creek in the Columbia River Gorge........May 10, 2009. The dark bulbils or propagules can easily be seen.
Bulbous bluegrass unfortunately growing along the edge of the Eagle Creek Trail above a cliff at about the one mile mark, Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area............April 13, 2012.
Paul Slichter