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Manual of the New Zealand Flora.

16. Simplicia, T. Kirk

16. Simplicia, T. Kirk.

A slender decumbent grass. Leaves flat. Spikelets minute, 1-flowered, solitary and pedicelled on the branches of a slender panicle; rhachilla disarticulating above the 2 outer glumes, produced above the flower into a minute bristle. Glumes 3; 2 outer minute, unequal, empty, hyaline, persistent; 3rd or flowering glume much longer than the outer glumes, oblong-lanceolate, acuminate or shortly awned, keeled, obscurely 1–3-nerved. Palea almost as long as the flowering glume, 2-nerved. Lodicules 2. Stamens 1–2. Styles distinct; stigmas shortly plumose. Grain oblong, free within the flowering glume and palea.

A peculiar monotypic genus, endemic in New Zealand. Professor Hackel considers it to be intermediate between Sporobolus and Agrostis, differing from the former in the rhachilla being produced beyond the flower, and from the latter in the minute unequal empty glumes, large palea, &c. Mr. Kirk compared it to Muhlenbergia.

1.S. laxa, T. Kirk in Trans. N.Z. Inst. xxix. (1897) 497.—Culms weak, decumbent, very slender, filiform, 8–18 in. long. Leaves 1–4 in. long by 1/20–⅛ in. broad, flat, flaccid, glabrous or minutely ciliate along the nerves; sheaths long, glabrous or pubescent; ligule long, membranous. Panicle very slender, narrow, 2–6 in. long; rhachis filiform; branches few, filiform, erect, smooth or minutely scaberulous. Spikelets lanceolate, pale-green, about 1/12 in. long. Two outer glumes minute, unequal, glabrous, the lower ⅔ the length of the upper, which is ¼ the length of the flowering glume; 3rd or flowering glume acuminate or shortly awned, pubescent with short stiff erect hairs. Palea almost as long as the flowering glume, acute, pubescent. Ripe grain not seen.

North Island: Wellington—Dry River, Ruamahanga, Lower Wairarapa, Kirk! South Island: Otago—Deep Stream, Waikouaiti, Petrie!