Lyme grass (Leymus arenarius) flowers and fruit. Right: a close-up of a flower spike. The spikelets contain the individual florets. The stamens consist of a large, yellow anther and a narrow, transparent filament. The bottlebrush-like style is visible in the center of the image. Top left: a wider view of a flower spike. Bottom left: The spikelets (now the fruit, each containing a seed) are mature as indicated by their tan or beige color.
Lyme grass (Leymus arenarius) stems and leaves. Top: a base of a Lyme grass plant with it’s long, blue-green leaves. Bottom right: a close-up of the blue-green leaves of Lyme grass. On the right edge of the image, a portion of a culm (stem) can be seen. Bottom left: close-up of the base of a leaf where it abruptly diverges at a steep angle from the leaf sheath. The short ligule, an extension of the leaf sheath, is indicated.
Lyme grass (Leymus arenarius) plants high on 57th St. Beach. Left: three plants growing side by side, all with obvious dangling yellow anthers. Right: a closer view of the flower spike of a Lyme grass plant. The numerous yellow anthers are obvious; the styles are invisible at this scale. A large bract is apparent, attached at the base of the flower spike and angling off to the upper left.
Lyme grass (aka, European dunegrass) is an exotic species native to Europe; it is considered invasive along Lake Michigan and prohibited in large parts of Wisconsin. Lyme grass grows from rhizomes or in tufts 1.5-5 feet tall with blue-green culms 3-6 mm in diameter that are hairless (or nearly so). The leaves are alternate, blue with a waxy blush, 6-15 mm wide and about a foot long; the ligules are 0.3-2.5 mm long. The flower spikes are 5-14″ long, initially blue-green or silvery but turning beige when mature. There are typically one pair of spikelets per node on the spike. The spikelets are 1/2-1″ long, containing 2-5 (typically 3) florets; each floret contains two bottlebrush-like styles and 1-3 stamens, each typically with a single yellow anther. Like all grasses, Lyme grass is wind pollinated. Lyme grass is very similar to the native American dune grass (Leymus mollis) but the latter is greener and is finely hairy under the spike. Lyme grass has become established in sandy habitats around the Great Lakes and (curiously) along the coast of Greenland.
