PlantNET Home DONATE TODAY | PlantNET Home | Search NSW Flora | Contact Us  
FloraOnline
Introduction
Plant Name Search
Index Search
Spatial Search
Identification Keys
Classification
Glossary
WeedAlert
Telopea Journal
Other Data Sources
NEW SOUTH WALES FLORA ONLINE Printable Page

Secale cereale L.
Family Poaceae
Common name: Cereal Rye, Ryecorn

Secale cereale L. APNI*

Description: Erect annual to 1.2 m high; culms pubescent with hairs to 0.5 mm long below inflorescence.

Leaves with ligule membranous to 1 mm long, truncate, erose; auricles present, membranous; blade flat, to 13 mm wide, lax, glabrous.

Inflorescence a distichous spike, 5–15 cm long (excluding awns), to 1 cm wide (excluding awns), initially erect, finally drooping; rachis flattened, edges pubescent with hairs < 0.5 mm long. Spikelets 1.5–2.0 mm long (excluding awns), florets 2, bisexual. Glumes 10–15 mm long, subulate or tapering to an awn to 3 mm long, keel scabrous, 1-nerved. Lemmas exserted from glume, 1.5–2.0 mm long, subulate or tapering to an awn, 3-nerved, glabrous, keel and margins hirsute; awn straight, antrorsely barbed, to 5.5 cm long; palea 12–15 mm long.


Flowering: Flowers in spring.

Distribution and occurrence: Cultivated for making bread (usually dark-coloured) and for stock feed. it is a useful sand-binding species for reclamation after mining. Native of the Medit. region.
NSW subdivisions: *ST, *NWS, *CWS, *NWP
Other Australian states: *Vic. *W.A. *S.A.
AVH map***

X Triticale, a wheat/rye hybrid, resembling a vigorous rye plant, is becoming popular as a cereal and forage crop in many parts of the State.

Text by S. W. L. Jacobs & K. L. McClay
Taxon concept: Flora of NSW 4 (1993); Illustration in Jacobs, S.W.L., Whalley, R.D.B. & Wheeler, D.J.B. Grasses of New South Wales, Fourth Edition (2008).


APNI* Provides a link to the Australian Plant Name Index (hosted by the Australian National Botanic Gardens) for comprehensive bibliographic data
***The AVH map option provides a detailed interactive Australia wide distribution map drawn from collections held by all major Australian herbaria participating in the Australian Virtual Herbarium project.
  Privacy | Copyright | Disclaimer | About PlantNET | Cite PlantNET