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Urochloa ramosa

Urochloa ramosa, (formerly Brachiaria ramosa) the browntop millet or Dixie signalgrass,[2] is an annual, millet grass belonging to the grass family (Poaceae). The native range of Urochloa ramosa is from Africa to tropical and subtropical Asia.

Urochloa ramosa
Urochloa ramosa (formerly Brachiaria ramosa) from Ambanja, Madagascar
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Clade: Commelinids
Order: Poales
Family: Poaceae
Subfamily: Panicoideae
Genus: Urochloa
Species:
U. ramosa
Binomial name
Urochloa ramosa
(L.) T.Q.Nguyen
Synonyms[1]
List
    • Brachiaria chennaveeraiana Basappa & Muniy. in Proc. Indian Natl. Sci. Acad., B 49: 378 (1983)
    • Brachiaria marselinii Gawade & Gavade in J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 101: 291 (2004)
    • Brachiaria multispiculata H.Scholz in Willdenowia 12: 287 (1982)
    • Brachiaria ramosa (L.) Stapf in D.Oliver & auct. suc. (eds.), Fl. Trop. Afr. 9: 542 (1919)
    • Brachiaria ramosa var. pubescens Basappa & Muniy. in Proc. Indian Natl. Sci. Acad., B 49: 380 (1983)
    • Brachiaria regularis var. nidulans (Mez) Täckh. in Bull. Fac. Sci. Egypt. Univ. 17: 432 (1941)
    • Echinochloa ramosa (L.) Roberty in Fl. Ouest-Afr.: 398 (1954)
    • Panicum arvense Kunth in Révis. Gramin. 2: t. 109 (1831)
    • Panicum bispiculatum Chiov. in Annuario Reale Ist. Bot. Roma 8: 303 (1908 publ. 1907), pro syn.
    • Panicum brachylachnum Steud. in Syn. Pl. Glumac. 1: 62 (1853)
    • Panicum breviradiatum Hochst. in Flora 38: 195 (1855)
    • Panicum canescens Roth in J.J.Roemer & J.A.Schultes, Syst. Veg., ed. 15[bis]. 2: 457 (1817)
    • Panicum cognatissimum Steud. in Syn. Pl. Glumac. 1: 69 (1853)
    • Panicum crus-galli var. petiveri (Trin.) De Wild. & T.Durand in Ann. Mus. Congo Belge, Bot., sér. 2, 1(2): 72 (1900)
    • Panicum grossarium J.Koenig in Naturforscher (Halle) 23: 205 (1788), nom. illeg.
    • Panicum nidulans Mez in Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 34: 136 (1904)
    • Panicum ozogonum Steud. in Syn. Pl. Glumac. 1: 68 (1853)
    • Panicum pallidum Peter in Abh. Preuss. Akad. Wiss., Phys.-Math. Kl., n.f., 13(2): 45 (1928)
    • Panicum petiveri Trin. in Gram. Panic.: 144 (1826)
    • Panicum petiveri var. puberulum Chiov. in Annuario Reale Ist. Bot. Roma 8: 302 (1908 publ. 1907)
    • Panicum ramosum L. in Mant. Pl. 1: 29 (1767)
    • Panicum sorghum Steud. in Syn. Pl. Glumac. 1: 58 (1853)
    • Panicum supervacuum C.B.Clarke in J. Linn. Soc., Bot. 24: 407 (1888)
    • Setaria canescens (Roth) Kunth in Révis. Gramin. 1: 47 (1829)
    • Urochloa ramosa var. pubescens (Basappa & Muniy.) E.A.Kellogg in PhytoKeys 163: 293 (2020)
    • Urochloa supervacua (C.B.Clarke) Noltie in Edinburgh J. Bot. 56: 394 (1999)

Description edit

It has glabrous (hairlass) spikelets, are about 3.3 mm (0.1 in) long, the upper of each pair on a pedicel (stalk) about as long as the spikelet. The spikelets are more often slightly or distinctly puberulent and pedicels are often shorter. Plants found in Malesia and Australia always have shorter spikelets (only up to 3 mm long).[3][4]

Growth edit

Seed germination can happen in up to 5 days and the rapidly growing crop can then be harvested in the next two months. Its fine stems and leaves allow the plant to dry sufficiently to be used as a dry hay product.[2]

Taxonomy edit

It was originally published as Brachiaria ramosa (L.) Stapf in D.Oliver & auct. suc. (eds.), Fl. Trop. Afr. 9: 542 in 1919, before being renamed and published and described by botanist T.Q.Nguyen in Novosti Sist. Vyssh. Rast. 3: 13 in 1966.[1][5][6]

The specific epithet, ramosa, is a Latin adjective meaning "branched" which describes the plant as bearing branches.[7]

The reconstructed Proto-Dravidian name for Brachiaria ramosa is *conna-l.[8]

It is named differently in Indian languages such as “korale” and “kadu-baragu” in Kannada, “andakorra” and “pedda-sama” in Telugu.[9]

Distribution edit

It is found in Afghanistan, Andaman Islands, Bangladesh, Benin, Burkina, Cambodia, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Chad, China, Djibouti, East Himalaya, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Guinea-Bissau, Gulf States, Hainan, India, Ivory Coast, Java, Kenya, Lesser Sunda Islands, Liberia, Malawi, Malaya, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Myanmar, Nepal, New Guinea, Nicobar Islands, Niger, Nigeria, Northern Provinces (South Africa), Oman, Pakistan, Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, (island of) Socotra, Somalia, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Tanzania, Thailand, Vietnam, West Himalaya, Yemen and Zimbabwe.[1]

It has been introduced to parts of the United States (Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia), South America (Peru), Africa (Madagascar, Mauritius, the island of Réunion), and parts of Australia,[10] (Christmas Island, Northern Territory, Queensland and Western Australia).[1]

In parts of America, it is considered an invasive weed, as it has been found to reduce yield and lower quality of cotton in the southeastern United States.[11]

Uses edit

In South Asia, it is traditionally cultivated as a cereal crop.[9][12] It is used because it has potential to give high yield in resource-poor and fragile ecological conditions.[13] In the southern parts of India, the grains of browntop millet from non-shattering varieties are consumed as boiled whole grain (like rice), porridge, kheer or unleavened bread and dosa.[14]

The grain is also used as a birdseed, and forage crop (in the US) for domestic animals and game animals (such as deer and rabbit) and for birds such as turkey, duck, dove, quail and pheasant.[2] Browntop millet can represent up to 10–25% of the diet of terrestrial and water birds.[15] Also 50% of ingested seed found in mourning dove's crops was browntop millet.[16] Urochloa ramosa is also used to suppress root-knot nematode populations in tomato and pepper crops in south-eastern states of America.[17]

Urochloa ramosa also has the ability to accumulate significant amounts of metals such as lead and zinc in its shoot and root tissues making it an important plant for remediation of contaminated soils (Lakshmi et al., 2013).[18]

Pests edit

It is affected by insect pests such as:[19]

Within the US, army worms (Mythimna unipuncta) and grasshoppers are the common insect problems.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Urochloa ramosa (L.) T.Q.Nguyen | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d "Urochloa ramosa (Browntop Millet, Dixie Signalgrass) | North Carolina Extension Gardener Plant Toolbox". plants.ces.ncsu.edu. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
  3. ^ "Urochloa ramosa". Retrieved 4 October 2023.
  4. ^ Veldkamp, J.F. (1996). "Brachiaria, Urochloa (Gramineae-Paniceae) in Malesia". Blumea. 41: 413–437.
  5. ^ Faccenda, K. (2023). "Updates to the Hawaiian grass flora and selected keys to species: Part 2". Bishop Museum Occasional Papers. 155: 83–156.
  6. ^ Knapp, W.M.; Naczi, R.F.C. (2021). "Vascular plants of Maryland, USA. A comprehensive account of the state's botanical diversity". Smithsonian Contributions to Botany. 113: 1–151.
  7. ^ "ramosus,-a,-um". www.plantillustrations.org. Retrieved 2021-08-06.
  8. ^ Southworth, Franklin C. 2005. Proto-Dravidian Agriculture. Paper presented at the 7th ESCA Round Table Conference, Kyoto, June 2005.
  9. ^ a b Fuller, D. Q. (2006). "Agricultural origins and frontiers in South Asia: a working synthesis". J. World Prehistory. 20: 40–51. doi:10.1007/s10963-006-9006-8.
  10. ^ "Urochloa ramosa | AusGrass2". ausgrass2.myspecies.info. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
  11. ^ Molin, W.T. 2008. Browntop millet: an emerging weed problem. Proc. Beltwide Cotton Conf., Nashville, Tennessee. 8–11, Jan. 2008. http://ncc.confex.com/ncc/2008/techprogram/P8095. HTM (accessed 19 Aug. 2014)
  12. ^ Fuller, Dorian Q. (2014). "Millets: Origins and Development". Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology. New York, NY: Springer New York. pp. 4945–4948. doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-0465-2_2181.
  13. ^ Singh, Shivani; Suri, Sukhneet; Singh, Ranjana (12 September 2022). "Potential and unrealized future possibilities of browntop millet in the food sector". Front. Sustain. Food Syst. 6 (Sec. Sustainable Food Processing). doi:10.3389/fsufs.2022.974126.
  14. ^ Nesbitt, M.G. (2005). Prance, G.; Nesbitt, M.G. (eds.). The Cultural History of Plants. New York: Routledge Press. pp. 45–60.
  15. ^ USDA, NRCS. 2014. The PLANTS Database, (http://plants.usda.gov, 19 August 2014). National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC 27401-4901 USA
  16. ^ Futch, W. J. Duguay, and K. M. Tolson. 2013. Seed selection by mourning doves (Zenaida macroura) in northeastern Louisiana. LA Assoc. of Prof. Biolo. and The Wildlife Soc. LA Chap., 2013, Baton Rouge, LA. 15–16 Aug. 2013. Waddill Outdoor Education Center, Baton Rouge, LA.
  17. ^ McSorley, R.; Ozores-Hampton, M.; Stansly, P.A.; Conner, M. (1999). "Nematode management, soil fertility, and yield in organic vegetable production". Nematropica. 29: 205–213.
  18. ^ Lakshmi, P.M.; Jaison, S.; Muthukumar, T.; Muthukumar, M. (1 November 2013). "Assessment of metal accumulation capacity of Brachiaria ramosa collected from cement waste dumping area for the remediation of metal contaminated soil". Ecological Engineering. 60: 96–98. doi:10.1016/j.ecoleng.2013.07.043.
  19. ^ Kalaisekar, A (2017). Insect pests of millets: systematics, bionomics, and management. London: Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-12-804243-4. OCLC 967265246.

urochloa, ramosa, formerly, brachiaria, ramosa, browntop, millet, dixie, signalgrass, annual, millet, grass, belonging, grass, family, poaceae, native, range, from, africa, tropical, subtropical, asia, formerly, brachiaria, ramosa, from, ambanja, madagascar, s. Urochloa ramosa formerly Brachiaria ramosa the browntop millet or Dixie signalgrass 2 is an annual millet grass belonging to the grass family Poaceae The native range of Urochloa ramosa is from Africa to tropical and subtropical Asia Urochloa ramosa Urochloa ramosa formerly Brachiaria ramosa from Ambanja Madagascar Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Monocots Clade Commelinids Order Poales Family Poaceae Subfamily Panicoideae Genus Urochloa Species U ramosa Binomial name Urochloa ramosa L T Q Nguyen Synonyms 1 List Brachiaria chennaveeraiana Basappa amp Muniy in Proc Indian Natl Sci Acad B 49 378 1983 Brachiaria marselinii Gawade amp Gavade in J Bombay Nat Hist Soc 101 291 2004 Brachiaria multispiculata H Scholz in Willdenowia 12 287 1982 Brachiaria ramosa L Stapf in D Oliver amp auct suc eds Fl Trop Afr 9 542 1919 Brachiaria ramosa var pubescens Basappa amp Muniy in Proc Indian Natl Sci Acad B 49 380 1983 Brachiaria regularis var nidulans Mez Tackh in Bull Fac Sci Egypt Univ 17 432 1941 Echinochloa ramosa L Roberty in Fl Ouest Afr 398 1954 Panicum arvense Kunth in Revis Gramin 2 t 109 1831 Panicum bispiculatum Chiov in Annuario Reale Ist Bot Roma 8 303 1908 publ 1907 pro syn Panicum brachylachnum Steud in Syn Pl Glumac 1 62 1853 Panicum breviradiatum Hochst in Flora 38 195 1855 Panicum canescens Roth in J J Roemer amp J A Schultes Syst Veg ed 15 bis 2 457 1817 Panicum cognatissimum Steud in Syn Pl Glumac 1 69 1853 Panicum crus galli var petiveri Trin De Wild amp T Durand in Ann Mus Congo Belge Bot ser 2 1 2 72 1900 Panicum grossarium J Koenig in Naturforscher Halle 23 205 1788 nom illeg Panicum nidulans Mez in Bot Jahrb Syst 34 136 1904 Panicum ozogonum Steud in Syn Pl Glumac 1 68 1853 Panicum pallidum Peter in Abh Preuss Akad Wiss Phys Math Kl n f 13 2 45 1928 Panicum petiveri Trin in Gram Panic 144 1826 Panicum petiveri var puberulum Chiov in Annuario Reale Ist Bot Roma 8 302 1908 publ 1907 Panicum ramosum L in Mant Pl 1 29 1767 Panicum sorghum Steud in Syn Pl Glumac 1 58 1853 Panicum supervacuum C B Clarke in J Linn Soc Bot 24 407 1888 Setaria canescens Roth Kunth in Revis Gramin 1 47 1829 Urochloa ramosa var pubescens Basappa amp Muniy E A Kellogg in PhytoKeys 163 293 2020 Urochloa supervacua C B Clarke Noltie in Edinburgh J Bot 56 394 1999 Contents 1 Description 2 Growth 3 Taxonomy 4 Distribution 5 Uses 6 Pests 7 ReferencesDescription editIt has glabrous hairlass spikelets are about 3 3 mm 0 1 in long the upper of each pair on a pedicel stalk about as long as the spikelet The spikelets are more often slightly or distinctly puberulent and pedicels are often shorter Plants found in Malesia and Australia always have shorter spikelets only up to 3 mm long 3 4 Growth editSeed germination can happen in up to 5 days and the rapidly growing crop can then be harvested in the next two months Its fine stems and leaves allow the plant to dry sufficiently to be used as a dry hay product 2 Taxonomy editIt was originally published as Brachiaria ramosa L Stapf in D Oliver amp auct suc eds Fl Trop Afr 9 542 in 1919 before being renamed and published and described by botanist T Q Nguyen in Novosti Sist Vyssh Rast 3 13 in 1966 1 5 6 The specific epithet ramosa is a Latin adjective meaning branched which describes the plant as bearing branches 7 The reconstructed Proto Dravidian name for Brachiaria ramosa is conna l 8 It is named differently in Indian languages such as korale and kadu baragu in Kannada andakorra and pedda sama in Telugu 9 Distribution editIt is found in Afghanistan Andaman Islands Bangladesh Benin Burkina Cambodia Cameroon Cape Verde Chad China Djibouti East Himalaya Egypt Eritrea Ethiopia Gambia Guinea Bissau Gulf States Hainan India Ivory Coast Java Kenya Lesser Sunda Islands Liberia Malawi Malaya Mali Mauritania Mozambique Myanmar Nepal New Guinea Nicobar Islands Niger Nigeria Northern Provinces South Africa Oman Pakistan Philippines Saudi Arabia Senegal island of Socotra Somalia Sri Lanka Sudan Tanzania Thailand Vietnam West Himalaya Yemen and Zimbabwe 1 It has been introduced to parts of the United States Alabama Arkansas Florida Georgia Hawaii Illinois Kentucky Louisiana Maryland Mississippi North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Texas and Virginia South America Peru Africa Madagascar Mauritius the island of Reunion and parts of Australia 10 Christmas Island Northern Territory Queensland and Western Australia 1 In parts of America it is considered an invasive weed as it has been found to reduce yield and lower quality of cotton in the southeastern United States 11 Uses editIn South Asia it is traditionally cultivated as a cereal crop 9 12 It is used because it has potential to give high yield in resource poor and fragile ecological conditions 13 In the southern parts of India the grains of browntop millet from non shattering varieties are consumed as boiled whole grain like rice porridge kheer or unleavened bread and dosa 14 The grain is also used as a birdseed and forage crop in the US for domestic animals and game animals such as deer and rabbit and for birds such as turkey duck dove quail and pheasant 2 Browntop millet can represent up to 10 25 of the diet of terrestrial and water birds 15 Also 50 of ingested seed found in mourning dove s crops was browntop millet 16 Urochloa ramosa is also used to suppress root knot nematode populations in tomato and pepper crops in south eastern states of America 17 Urochloa ramosa also has the ability to accumulate significant amounts of metals such as lead and zinc in its shoot and root tissues making it an important plant for remediation of contaminated soils Lakshmi et al 2013 18 Pests editIt is affected by insect pests such as 19 shoot flies Atherigona oryzae Atherigona pulla and Atherigona punctata caseworm Parapoynx stagnalis red hairy caterpillars Amsacta albistriga and Amsacta moorei Within the US army worms Mythimna unipuncta and grasshoppers are the common insect problems 2 References edit a b c d Urochloa ramosa L T Q Nguyen Plants of the World Online Kew Science Plants of the World Online Retrieved 4 October 2023 a b c d Urochloa ramosa Browntop Millet Dixie Signalgrass North Carolina Extension Gardener Plant Toolbox plants ces ncsu edu Retrieved 4 October 2023 Urochloa ramosa Retrieved 4 October 2023 Veldkamp J F 1996 Brachiaria Urochloa Gramineae Paniceae in Malesia Blumea 41 413 437 Faccenda K 2023 Updates to the Hawaiian grass flora and selected keys to species Part 2 Bishop Museum Occasional Papers 155 83 156 Knapp W M Naczi R F C 2021 Vascular plants of Maryland USA A comprehensive account of the state s botanical diversity Smithsonian Contributions to Botany 113 1 151 ramosus a um www plantillustrations org Retrieved 2021 08 06 Southworth Franklin C 2005 Proto Dravidian Agriculture Paper presented at the 7th ESCA Round Table Conference Kyoto June 2005 a b Fuller D Q 2006 Agricultural origins and frontiers in South Asia a working synthesis J World Prehistory 20 40 51 doi 10 1007 s10963 006 9006 8 Urochloa ramosa AusGrass2 ausgrass2 myspecies info Retrieved 5 October 2023 Molin W T 2008 Browntop millet an emerging weed problem Proc Beltwide Cotton Conf Nashville Tennessee 8 11 Jan 2008 http ncc confex com ncc 2008 techprogram P8095 HTM accessed 19 Aug 2014 Fuller Dorian Q 2014 Millets Origins and Development Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology New York NY Springer New York pp 4945 4948 doi 10 1007 978 1 4419 0465 2 2181 Singh Shivani Suri Sukhneet Singh Ranjana 12 September 2022 Potential and unrealized future possibilities of browntop millet in the food sector Front Sustain Food Syst 6 Sec Sustainable Food Processing doi 10 3389 fsufs 2022 974126 Nesbitt M G 2005 Prance G Nesbitt M G eds The Cultural History of Plants New York Routledge Press pp 45 60 USDA NRCS 2014 The PLANTS Database http plants usda gov 19 August 2014 National Plant Data Team Greensboro NC 27401 4901 USA Futch W J Duguay and K M Tolson 2013 Seed selection by mourning doves Zenaida macroura in northeastern Louisiana LA Assoc of Prof Biolo and The Wildlife Soc LA Chap 2013 Baton Rouge LA 15 16 Aug 2013 Waddill Outdoor Education Center Baton Rouge LA McSorley R Ozores Hampton M Stansly P A Conner M 1999 Nematode management soil fertility and yield in organic vegetable production Nematropica 29 205 213 Lakshmi P M Jaison S Muthukumar T Muthukumar M 1 November 2013 Assessment of metal accumulation capacity of Brachiaria ramosa collected from cement waste dumping area for the remediation of metal contaminated soil Ecological Engineering 60 96 98 doi 10 1016 j ecoleng 2013 07 043 Kalaisekar A 2017 Insect pests of millets systematics bionomics and management London Elsevier ISBN 978 0 12 804243 4 OCLC 967265246 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Urochloa ramosa amp oldid 1194867080, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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