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Alkali sacaton is a native perennial large bunchgrass ranging in height from 50 to 150 cm (20-60 inches). The leaves are flat, 2-6 mm (1/16-1/4 inches) wide, and taper from the base of the leaf. The inflorescence is an open panicle 20-50 cm (8-20 inches) long with a pyramidal shape.
Long-lived, Sporobolus airoides (Alkali Sacaton) is a warm-season, densely tufted perennial grass forming attractive bunches of long narrow arching leaves. The fine textured leaves range in color from silvery-green in summer to golden with orange hues in the fall and fade to light bronze in winter.
Alkalai sacaton is a tough grass that is found in dry habitats including sage scrub, grassland and deserts. Its clumping habit and drought endurance make it good for Southwestern style gardens and for contrast to other foliage plants.
Sporobolus airoides is a species of grass known by the common name alkali sacaton. [1] It is native to western North America, including the Western United States west of the Mississippi River, British Columbia and Alberta in Canada, and northern and central Mexico.
Common Name: Alkali Sacaton. Description: Alkali sacaton is an adaptable, durable, and attractive grass with great potential as an ornamental. Medium-sized in stature, this species provides an extended season of beauty with its long-lasting, airy, pinkish seed heads.
Salado alkali sacaton is a good source of forage or as pasture grass in lowlands and in alkali regions. It is useful for range improvement, mined land reclamations, highway revegetation, and forage production on most arid lands in the West.
Sporobolus airoides, or Alkali dropseed, is a warm-season, perennial, ornamental bunchgrass native to western and central United States and often found in saline flats, prairies and sands, and meadows and valleys with moderately saline soils (hence the alkali common name).