About Bromus japonicus Houtt.
Bromus japonicus Houtt. is an annual or biennial tufted grass that reaches 0.2โ1 m (7.9 in โ 3 ft 3.4 in) in height. Its culms are either erect or ascending. Leaf sheaths are covered in fine soft hairs, though the uppermost sheaths may occasionally lack hair. Pubescent, obtuse ligules measure 1โ2.2 mm (0.039โ0.087 in) long. Densely hairy leaf blades are 10โ20 cm (3.9โ7.9 in) long and 2โ4 mm (0.079โ0.157 in) wide. This grass produces open, one-sided panicles 10โ22 cm (3.9โ8.7 in) long and 4โ13 cm (1.6โ5.1 in) wide, with divergent branches that have drooping tips. These divergent branches are typically longer than the purplish spikelets, and are either ascending or spreading. The lanceolate spikelets are 2โ2.5 cm (0.79โ0.98 in) long and borne on slender pedicels. Each spikelet holds 6 to 12 florets, whose bases are concealed when the plant reaches maturity. Glumes are either smooth or rough to the touch; the acute lower glumes are three-nerved and 4.5โ7 mm (0.18โ0.28 in) long, while the obtuse upper glumes are five-nerved and 5โ8 mm (0.20โ0.31 in) long. Obtuse, firm, nearly leathery lemmas measure 7โ9 mm (0.28โ0.35 in) long and 1.2โ2.2 mm (0.047โ0.087 in) wide, with nine inconspicuous nerves. Lemma margins roll slightly inward at maturity, and the twisted, strongly divergent awns are 8โ12 mm (0.31โ0.47 in) long. The palea is distinctly shorter than its associated glume. Anthers measure 1โ1.5 mm (0.039โ0.059 in) long. Caryopses are slightly shorter than the paleas, and are thin, flat, and slightly rolled inward. This species flowers from June to August.
Bromus japonicus grows in fields, waste areas, road verges, sand dunes, and other similar open sites. It is a troublesome weed in grain fields and a noxious weed in prairies, where it competes with native perennial plants for water and nutrients. It cannot tolerate alkaline soils. It is native to Eurasia, but has become naturalized across the United States and southern Canada; it is rare in Yukon.