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Jointed goatgrass (Aegilops cylindrica)
Jointed goatgrass (Aegilops cylindrica)
Category A Weed
Weed Category Descriptions
Grasses family (Poaceae)
Weed Family List
Helpful Links
Glossary of Terms
List of all photo credits
Photo Credit List
Stem
15-30 in. tall with 1 to many stems or tillers; tillers and branching from base of plant can give it a bunchgrass-like appearance
Leaves
Blue-green, 1-6 in. long, 0.125-0.25 in. wide, simple; alternate; auricles, ligules, leaf sheaths and leaf margins near leaf base have evenly spaced fine hairs which distinguish it from other grass weeds
Flower
Seedhead cylindrical, 1-5 in. long; spikelets held close to the spike, resulting in a jointed look
Root
Fibrous; spiklelet that led to germination commonly still attached to the base of the plant
Other
Grows best in grasslands, rangeland, pastures, roadsides, wheat and alfalfa fields; grows well in compacted soils; known to occur in Churchill, Elko and Washoe counties
Winter annual; seeds viable in soil up to 5 years
Infestations in wheat can reduce value of crop; may cross-breed with wheat
Control
Hand-pull or hoe small infestations; repeated mowing prior to seed production is effective; tilling to 4 in. depth is effective, but subsequent tilling may return seeds to the surface; burning can kill mature plants and remove thatch, but it will not control the seedbank
Apply glyphosate post emergence in late winter or early spring before flowering to actively growing plants; apply imazapic, sulfometuron or sulfometuron+chlorsulfuron preemergence in the fall or post emergence in early spring to young plants after soil thaws
Images
Mature plant
Roots
Inflorescence
Spikelet
Nevada Noxious Weed Guide