Terminology:
Adopted or taken from:
Botany, Fifth Edition. 1971. Carl L. Wilson, Walter Loomis, and Taylor A Steens. Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
Forages- The Science of Grassland Agriculture, Third Edition. 1976. Maurice E Heath, Darrel s. Metcalfe, and Robert F. Barnes. The Iowa State Press.
Range Grasses of Kansas. Paul D. Ohlenbusch. 1976. Kansas state University Cooperative Extension Service publication C-567. Manhattan, Kansas.
| Annual | Plant that completes its life cycle from seed in one (year) season. |
| Annual, Winter | Plant species that initiates growth in the fall, lives overwinter, and dies after producing seed the following season. |
| Auricle | Earlike lobe at the base of leaf blades of certain grass species. |
| Awn | Bristle-like growth extending from the lemma of a floret. |
| Blade | The expanded part of a leaf; that part above the sheath and away from the stem. |
| Biennial | Plant that normally requires two years to reach maturity; basal leaves are produced in the first year, while floral structures develop and produce seed in the second year. |
| Bunchgrass | Grass that propagates by seed only; thin stands appear to be in clumps. |
| Caryopsis | Small, one seeded, dry fruit with a thin pericarp surrounding and adhering to the seed (grain) or fruit of grasses |
| Cilia | Hair-like structures. |
| Collar | Where leaf sheath and leaf blade join. |
| Cool-season grass | Grass species adapted to rapid growth during the cool, moist periods of the year; usually dormant during hot weather or injured by it. |
| Corm | Bulblike, short, fleshy, solid stem base, e.g., timothy. |
| Culm | Jointed stem of a grass. |
| Dehulled seed | Seed from which pods, glumes, lemma, and palea have been removed, as sometimes with lespedeza and timothy; also often ambiguously referred to as "hulled" seed. |
| Floret | In grasses, the lemma and palea with enclosed stamens and pistil. In legumes, the individual flower, usually belonging to a cluster. |
| Forage | Herbaceous plants or plant parts fed to domestic animals (generally, the term refers to such material as pasturage, hay, silage, dehy, and green chop in contrast to less digestible plant material known as "roughage and/or 'browse", plants of a woody nature); to graze. |
| Glabrous | Smooth; having a surface devoid of hair or pubescence. |
| Glumes | The lowest bracts of a grass spikelet which are empty. Usually there are two per spikelet in grasses. |
| Grass | Botanically, any plant of the family Gramineae. Generally, in grassland agriculture, the term does not include cereals when grown or grain. |
| Graze | Partial defoliation of forage plants by the animal; to feed animals on growing grass or herbage; to forage. See also Pasture. |
| Green chop | Mechanically harvested forage fed to animals while it is fresh and succulent. Preferred to "soiling," "zero grazing," or "green feed." |
| Green manure | Crop grown and plowed under to improve the soil. |
| Hay | Entire herbage of forage plants, sometimes including seed of grasses and legumes, that is harvested and dried for animal feed. |
| Haylage | Product resulting from ensiling forage with about 45% moisture in the absence of oxygen. |
| Hilum | Scar on the seed 'left by the stalk that attached the seed to the placenta. |
| Inflorescence | Flowering part of a plant. |
| Internode | The part of a plant stem between joints or nodes. |
| Legume | Plant member of the family Leguminosae, with the characteristic of forming nitrogen-fixing nodules on its roots, in this way making use of atmospheric nitrogen possible. |
| Lemma | Chaffy bract or scale away from the stem and enclosing the seed (Palea on the other side). |
| Ligule | Tongue-like, thin, and specialized tissue extending beyond the sheath and seen at the base of the leaf blade of some grass species. |
| Midrib | The central vein of a leaf. |
| Multifoliolate | Many leaflets per leaf, termed compounding in legumes. |
| Node | Joint of a culm or stem. |
| Palea | Chaffy bract opposite the lemma and facing the stem enclosing the grass seed. |
| Palmately compound | A compound leaf with the leaflets attached at the tip of the petiole. |
| Panicle | Inflorescence with a main stem (axis) and subdivided branches. In grasses the panicle may be compact and spikelike (timothy) or open (smooth bromegrass). |
| Pasture | Fenced area of domesticated forages, usually improved, on which animals are grazed; to graze. |
| Peduncle | Primary flower stalk supporting either a cluster or a solitary flower; in gasses, the stalk of an inflorescence. |
| Perennial | A Forage plant that remains viable for 3 years or more, producing culm and leaves each year from rootstocks, corm buds, rhizomes, stolons, or branches. |
| Petiole | Stalk. by which a legume leaf blade is attached to the stem; a leafstalk. |
| Petiolule | Stalk- or the stem-like structure that attach the leaflet to the petiole. |
| pH | The chemist s measure of acidity and alkalinity; pH 7 is neutral; pH above 7 represents alkalinity and below acidity. The scale is logarithmic; a solution with a pH of 4 is 100 times as acidic as one with a pH of 6 and 10 times as acidic as one with a pH of 5. |
| Pinnately compound | A compound leaf with the leaflets arranged along the sides of a common axis. |
| Pubescent | With hairs. |
| Pure live seed (PLS) | Percentage of the content of a seed lot that is pure and viable; determined by multiplying the percentage of pure seed by the percentage of viable seed and dividing by 100. |
| Raceme | Inflorescence in which the flowers or spikelets are singly supported along a common main axis. |
| Rachilla | Small rachis; axis of a grass spikelet in grasses. |
| Rachis | Axis of a grass spike or raceme. |
| Rhizome | Underground stem, usually horizontal and capable of producing new shoots and roots at the nodes. |
| Seed--, Unhulled (in the hull) | Mature seed with the pods, glumes, or lemma and palea retained. |
| Sheath | A tubular envelope; the lower part of the grass leaf which fits around the stem (culm). |
| Sod | Top few centimeters of soil permeated by and held together with grass roots or grass-legume roots. |
| Sodformer | Grass that propagates by seed and vegetatively by rhizomes and/or stolons to form a sod. |
| Spike | A grass inflorescence in which spikelets are attached directly to the rachis. |
| Spikelet | Unit of the inflorescence in grasses, consisting of two outer glumes and one or more enclosed florets. |
| Stipule | One of the usually small, paired leaf-like appendages at the base of a legume leaf. |
| Stolon | Trailing or lateral stem of some forage species at or below the soil surface capable of rooting and sending up new shoots at the nodes. |
| Tendril | A thread-like, clasping organ of climbing plants; usually a modified leaf or part of a leaf. |
| Tiller | Branch or shoot originating from axillary buds at a basal node in grasses. (Also the last name of Purdue's new football coach.) |
| Umbel | A type of inflorescence in which flowers diverge from the same point. |
| Warm-season grass | A grass species that makes its major growth during the warmer part of the year. Preferred to "hot weather." |
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