Digitaria ciliaris is a species of grass known by the common names southern crabgrass,[2]tropical finger-grass,[3]tropical crabgrass or summer grass.[4]
The grass is known as "ගුරු තණ - guru thana" in Sri Lanka.
Distribution
Digitaria ciliaris is a tough plant, believed to have originated in Asia but now found all over the tropical belt of the planet, as well as in many temperate regions of both hemispheres.[5] This grass is an invasive species considered an aggressive weed in certain countries, including China, Mexico and the United States.[5]
This grass is an annual plant that can grow up to 1 m tall, but is usually much shorter. The roots are at the nodes and the stems produce runners that allow the plant to grow fast forming scruffy-looking patches about 1 m across and half a metre in height. The leaves are linear to linear-ovate narrowing at the tip to 15 centimeters long. The inflorescence is at the top of a long stem, usually much taller than the leaves, with two to nine 5–10cm long sub-digitate racemes.[5]
General appearance of the grass.
Plant and roots.
Forage Crop
Southern crabgrass, especially the cultivars Red River Crabgrass, 'Impact', and 'Quick-n-Big', have been utilized as a forage crop for livestock, as it is a highly nutritious warm season grass.[7][8] Red river crabgrass responds well to nitrogen fertilizer, growing around 6 inches tall, and needs to be in rotation with cool-season forage.
Heatwole, H., Done, T., Cameron, E. Community Ecology of a Coral Cay, A Study of One-Tree Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia. Series: Monographiae Biologicae, Vol. 43, p. 102
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