Description:
This perennial grass forms tufts of leafy culms about 20–140" (50–350
cm.) tall. The culms are light to medium green, hairless, terete, and
unbranched; there are several alternate leaves along the length of each
culm that are ascending, arching, or widely spreading. The linear leaf
blades are 4–10" (10–25 cm.) long, 7–16 mm. wide, and flat; each leaf
blade clasps the culm at its base with a pair of small auricles (eared
basal lobes). The leaf blade surface is light to medium green or bluish
tinted, dull-colored (rather than shiny), and usually scabrous
(rough-textured). Similarly, the open leaf sheaths are light to medium
green or bluish tinted, vertically veined, and hairless, except along
their margins, where they are sometimes ciliate.
Each fertile culm
terminates in a spike-like nodding inflorescence that is 3–8" (7.5–20
cm.) long. Along the central axis of this inflorescence, there are
moderately dense clusters of 2–3 spikelets facing in all directions.
Each spikelet consists of a pair of ascending glumes (non-fertile or
empty scales) at the bottom and 2–4 ascending lemmas (fertile scales)
above; the latter are arranged in 2 loose ranks. Each glume is 15–30
mm. long (including its awn), 0.3–1 mm. wide (toward the base), and
linear in shape, tapering gradually into
a long straight awn toward the middle. The base of each glume is
somewhat hardened and thickened; 1–3 longitudinal veins are usually
visible along the body of the glume below its awn. Each lemma is 20–40
mm. long (including its awn), linear-lanceolate or linear-elliptic in
shape, tapering gradually into a long straight awn
that is about twice the length of the lemma's body. The body of the
lemma has 3–5 faint longitudinal veins and it is convex along its outer
surface. A perfect floret is located along the
inner side of each lemma; it has exserted feathery stigmas and anthers.
Opposite from each
lemma there is a narrow membranous palea that is 6.5–8 mm.
long; the apex of the palea is rounded or truncate, usually with a
shallow notch in the middle.
The blooming period occurs during
mid-summer or late summer, lasting about 1–2 weeks. The florets are
cross-pollinated by the wind. Afterwards, mature spikelets
disarticulate above the glumes and between the florets. The florets are
replaced by somewhat flattened and elongated grains. The root system
consists of a crown of fibrous roots. This grass can form clonal
offsets through
its root system. By late autumn, this grass dies down to a loose
cluster of low basal leaves that are semi-evergreen. In this state it
overwinters until the spring, when new leafy culms develop.
Cultivation:
The preference is full sun to light shade, moist to mesic conditions,
and soil containing loam, clay-loam, or silt. Most growth and
development occurs from mid-spring to summer. This grass has a
cool-season C3 metabolism, so it matures more quickly than most
warm-season grasses.
Range
&
Habitat: Riverbank Wild Rye
(Elymus riparius) occurs in scattered locations throughout Illinois,
where it native and uncommon (see
Distribution
Map). This grass occurs
primarily in the Midwest and NE areas of the United States. Habitats
include cemetery prairies (in Indiana), open bottomland woodlands,
rocky woodlands along rivers, wooded bluffs and slopes, moist
savannas, banks of rivers, and moist ground along woodland streams.
This grass
occurs in natural areas with some history of disturbance and also high
quality natural areas. Occasional mowing or ground fires are probably
beneficial in maintaining populations of this grass by reducing
competition from woody plants.
Faunal
Associations:
Riverbank
Wild Rye (Elymus riparius) probably attracts many of the same insects
as other Wild Rye grasses (Elymus spp.). This would include such insect
feeders as the larvae of leaf-mining flies (Cerodontha spp.), larvae of
leaf-mining moths (Elachista spp.), larvae of a leaf beetle (Chalepus
walshii), larvae of the Grass-stem Sawfly (Cephus cinctus), larvae of
the Wild Rye Jointworm (Tetramesa elymi), the Four-humped Stink Bug
(Brochymena quadripustulata) and other stink bugs, aphids (Carolinaia
spp. and others), a leafhopper (Elymana acuma), and miscellaneous
mealybugs (Spencer & Steyskal, 1986; Microleps website, 2010;
Eiseman, 2016; Felt, 1917; Rider, 2009; Blackman & Eastop,
2013;
Panzer et al., 2006; ScaleNet website, 2014). The large seeds or
Riverbank Wild Rye and other Wild Rye grasses are eaten by various
small rodents, including the White-footed Mouse, Deer Mouse, Meadow
Jumping Mouse, and wild House Mouse (Whitaker, 1966; Whitaker &
Mumford, 1970). The young foliage of these grasses are edible to many
hoofed mammalian herbivores, however the heavily awned seedheads of
these grasses at maturity can cause mechanical injury to the digestive
tracts and eyes of livestock.
Photographic
Location:
The wildflower garden of the webmaster in Urbana, Illinois.
Comments:
This is one of the lesser-known and less common Wild Rye grasses
(Elymus spp.). It is rarely cultivated and often overlooked in habitat
restorations; hopefully this will change in the future. Riverbank Wild
Rye (Elymus riparius) is perhaps most similar in appearance to Silky
Wild Rye (Elymus villosus) because both of these grasses produce
nodding inflorescences that are more slender than those of Canada Wild
Rye (Elymus canadensis). The inflorescences of the latter grass also
tend to droop more and their awns curve outward as they mature, instead
of remaining straight like the awns of Riverbank Wild Rye and Silky
Wild Rye. In general, Riverbank Wild Rye lacks the pubescent leaf
sheaths and leaf blades that are often found on Silky Wild Rye, and the
lemmas of Riverbank Wild Rye, while often sparsely hairy, lack the fine
pubescence that can be
found on the lemmas of Silky Wild Rye. Another difference between these
two grasses is the size of the their respective paleas (membranous
inner scales):
Riverbank Wild Rye tends to have longer paleas. Another common species,
Virginia Wild Rye (Elymus virginicus), can be readily distinguished
from the preceding grasses by its erect inflorescences.