Reed canary-grass (Phalaris arundinacea) inflorescence and spikelets. Right: a fully grown reed canary-grass. Left: a portion of a reed canary-grass inflorescence and a basal leaf at the end of May. Each spikelet on the inflorescence is sharply pointed, often with a purple-tinged tip; each contains a single fertile floret and two reduced sterile florets.
Reed canary-grass (Phalaris arundinacea) stems (culms) and leaves. Left: a fully-grown plant on the west side of Wooded Island. Note the large, bluish-gray leaves. The leaf blades abruptly narrow just before they attach to the stem giving a squared-off appearance to the leaf bases. Right: a close-up of the culm (arrow) and the junction between the leaf (L) and the leaf sheath (LS) on another specimen on the eastern shore of East Lagoon.
