Vascular Plants of North Carolina
Account for Variable Witchgrass - Dichanthelium commutatum subsp. commutatum   (J.A. Schultes) Gould
Members of Poaceae:
Members of Dichanthelium with account distribution info or public map:
Google Images
Section 5 » Family Poaceae
Author(J.A. Schultes) Gould
DistributionThroughout the state, including Outer Banks and barrier islands.

ME to MI and MO, south to FL and TX; Mex.
AbundanceCommon throughout.
HabitatDry to mesic or moist woodlands and forests of many kinds, including open and rocky to shady and moist, trailsides, etc.
PhenologyFlowering and fruiting May-October.
IdentificationTogether, D. commutatum subsp. ashei and subsp. commutatum are among our most often encountered witchgrasses. Subsp. ashei has narrower and shorter leaves, plus very short-hairy (puberulent) stems (vs. glabrous). Leaves of subsp. commutatum may be broad enough to recall D. boscii and D. latifolium; see them for separation.
Taxonomic CommentsA note about Dichanthelium: This genus is not impossible to identify to species! But it takes applied effort over a period of time in order to learn the various species and what their morphological limits are. We strongly recommend that you read the introduction to the treatment in Weakley et al. (2023), written by Richard LeBlond. LeBlond has made order out of near chaos, and his keys work very well for our plants. Most Dichanthelium taxa ("Dichs") do not grow everywhere indiscrimminately, but prefer certain well-defined habitats. Note that most species produce flowers/fruits twice a year -- a vernal period and an autumnal period -- and that measurements of spikelets and achenes are taken from vernal plants. Some species also have a third, or summer, period. In the vernal period there is a single inflorescence at the tip of the stem. In the autumnal period, plants produce elongate branches with bunched (congested) leaves and so look quite different from vernal plants. Inflorescences are produced in leaf axils as well as at the tips of branches. NOTE: Older texts had these species essentially all within the very large genus Panicum. "Dich" species are typically named as "Witchgrass" and Panicum species named as "Panicgrass".
Other Common Name(s)
State Rank[S5]
Global RankG5TNR
State Status
US Status
USACE-agcp
USACE-emp
County Map - click on a county to view source of record.
Photo Gallery
photographercommentsphoto_linkcountyobsType
B.A. SorrieSGL, May 2015. RichmondPhoto_natural
B.A. SorrieSandhills Game Land, May 2010. RichmondPhoto_natural
Select a source
AllHerbaria
Individual
Select an occurrence type
AllCollection_naturalPhoto_natural