Home
Map
Browse Map
Explore away
Explore Map Collection
Check out our basemaps
Print a Map Plus
Generate a high-quality PDF
Field Guide
Field Guide
Discover local flora, fauna, geology, and more
Local Flora & Fauna
Learn the ecology of your area
Local Geology
Learn the geologic formation at your feet
Get Started or Sign In
Welcome
Sign up to start exploring the one-of-a-kind Natural Atlas Topo map
Continue with Apple
Or
Already have an account? Sign In
MAP
Topo
Waterfalls
Rock Formations
Campgrounds
Trails
Boat Launches
National Parks
State Parks
Scenic Spots
Measure
You must upgrade to measure routes
Start Free Trial
0 ft
Max 0 ft
Copyright © Natural Atlas | Roads, Buildings © OSM Contributors | Data Sources
Topo
Ecoregions
Public Lands
...
BASEMAPS
Default Weather
Temperature
Smoke
...
WEATHER

Lopsided Oat

Ventenata dubia (species), “North Africa Grass”, “Hairgrass”, “North African Grass”, “Wiregrass”

On the Web

On Wikipedia
Ventenata dubia is a species of grass known by the common names North Africa grass and wiregrass. It is native to southern Europe, North Africa and the Middle East. It is becoming well known in North America, where it is an introduced species and a noxious weed of cultivated and disturbed habitat. It is problematic in the Pacific Northwest, where it was first identified in Washington in 1952 and Idaho in 1957. It was found in Utah in 1996. It probably spreads when it gets mixed in with grass seed and is transported and inadvertently planted.This is an annual grass growing 15 to 70 centimeters tall with thin, branching stems that are naked and wiry. These wiry stems make the grass hard to cut. The inflorescence is an open panicle with very slender, spreading branches bearing spikelets at…
Read More on Wikipedia

Your Checklist

You have noted 0 Lopsided Oats
Learn How to Take A Field Note
Range Map
Range Maps show field notes recorded by Natural Atlas contributors and other datasets via GBIF.org
Taxonomy
Your Notes
Join Natural Atlas to keep track of the Lopsided Oats you see on your outings.
Join Natural Atlas
Already have an account?
Sign In
Top Observers
Map
Plans
Field Guide
Community
My Profile
My Trips
0
My Field Notes
0
Notifications
More