Fimbristylis miliaceaLatin nameFimbristylis miliacea (L.) Vahl FamilyCyperaceae Common nameLesser fimbristylis, grasslike fimbristylis, and hoorahgrass SynonymsFimbristylis littoralis Gaudich., Isolepis miliacea (L.) J. Presl & C. Presl, Scirpus miliaceus L., Trichelostylis miliacea (L.) Nees Geographical distributionSouth and Southeast Asia: Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, India, Indonesia Lao PDR, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Vietnam. Rest of the world: Ecuador, Madagascar, Nicaragua, Peru, and Suriname. MorphologyAnnual or perennial, without hairs, strongly tillering, with fibrous roots and up to 80−90 cm high. Stem: slender, erect, densely tufted, compressed, and smooth; strongly angled at the top and flattened at the base; 20−70 cm tall. Leaf: stiff and thread-like; on flowerless stems: in 2 rows and with flattened sheaths; no prominent midribs; on flowering stems: only linear leaf sheaths; basal leaves have overlapping leaf sheaths; ligule absent. Inflorescence: 6−10 cm long, compound umbel with 6−50 spikelets; spikelets reddish brown, 2−4 mm long and either round or acute at apex. Fruit: straw-colored or pale ivory nut, 0.2−0.3 mm long. Biology and ecologyPropagates by seeds; flowers year-round and produces 10,000 seeds per plant; seeds can germinate immediately after reaching maturity. In rice fields, seedlings appear soon after rice is sown; flowers in about one month and capable of producing a second generation in the same season. Germinates where flood water is shallow or absent and seedlings may emerge throughout the entire growing period of rice. Agricultural importanceIt is a serious and widespread weed of rice. An alternate host of diseases Rhizoctonia solani, Thanatephorus cucumeris, and Xanthomonas campestris pv. oryzae, insects Creatonotus gangis Linnaeus, Leptocorisa acuta (Thunberg), and Mythimna separata (Walker), and nematodes Hirschmanniella sp. and Meloidogyne spp. ManagementCultural control: hand cultivation. Chemical control: postemergence application of MCPA and 2,4-D reported to be effective in rice. Selected references
JLA Catindig, RT Lubigan, and D Johnson |