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You are viewing an archived site. The Chesapeake Bay Introduced Species Database project ended in 2020 and the database is no longer receiving updates. Learn more…
Image of Digitaria sanguinalis

Digitaria sanguinalis

Plants

Hairy Crabgrass

Image Credit: Botany Section of the Department of Systematic Biology, Smithsonian Institution

Description Taxonomy Invasion History Ecology Impacts References

Description

Synonymy - This is a partial list; Hitchcock and Chase (1950) list 20 synonyms.

Potentially Misidentified Species- Digitaria ischaemum (Smooth Crabgrass) is introduced and common in lawns and disturbed upland areas (Hitchcock and Chase 1950). Digitaria serotina is native, and more of a true wetland plant (Godfrey and Wooten 1979).


Taxonomy

Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus
Plantae Magnoliophyta Liliopsida Cyperales Poaceae Digitaria

Synonyms

Panicum sanguinale; Panicum adscendens; Cynodon praecox; Paspalum sanguinalis; Dactylon sanguinalis; Digitaria praecox; Digitaria fimbriata; Syntherisma praecox; Syntherisma sanguinalis; Syntherisma fimbriatum

Invasion History

Chesapeake Bay Status

First Record Population Range Introduction Residency Source Region Native Region Vectors
1739 Established Stable Introduced Boundary Resident Europe Eurasia Shipping(Dry Ballast), Agriculture(Agricultural Weed)

History of Spread

Digitaria sanguinalis (Hairy Crabgrass), of Eurasian origin (Hitchcock and Chase 1950), was among colonial (before 1753) MD herbarium specimens listed by Brown et al. (1987), and collected by John Clayton in VA in the 1730's (Gronovius 1739; Reveal 1983). It was listed by Pursh (1814) as 'common in cultivated ground', and by Gray (1848) as 'everywhere naturalized in cultivated grounds, troublesome in gardens.' Presumably it came to North America with seed, farm implements, etc., and followed the spread of European methods of cultivation closely. It is now widespread across the United States, though more common in the east and north (Hitchcock and Chase 1950; Natural Resources Conservation Service 1998).

Digitaria sanguinalis was listed for Baltimore by Aikin (1837) and for the District of Columbia by Brereton (1830), and by all subsequent Washington D.C.-Baltimore floras. It is found in nearly all VA counties, and also widespread in MD, and is an abundant and troublesome weed in lawns and gardens (Brown and Brown 1984; Harvill et al. 1992). It was reported from tidal marshes by Wass (1972,; from disturbed areas of Hamilton Marshes, on the Delaware River NJ (Leck et al. 1988) and from beach margins in Kent County MD (Krauss et al. 1971), King George County VA (Simmons et al. 1995), and likely elsewhere. It probably is occasional, but widespread at the edges of disturbed intertidal areas (Whigham 1995).

History References - Aikin 1837; Brereton 1830; Gray 1848; Gronovius 1739; Harvill et al. 1992; Hitchcock and Chase 1950; Krauss et al. 1971; Leck et al. 1988; Natural Resources Conservation Service 1998; Pursh 1814; Reveal 1983; Wass 1972; Whigham 1995

Invasion Comments

Invasion Status- The USDA Plants database (Natural Resources Consevation Service 2001) calls this plant 'native' to the U.S, but most other available sources (e.g, Fernald 1950, Gleason and Cronquist 1991, Hitchock and Chase 1950, etc.), call it 'Introduced'.

Ecology

Environmental Tolerances

For SurvivalFor Reproduction
Minimum Maximum Minimum Maximum
Temperature (ºC)
Salinity (‰) 0.0 0.0
Oxygen
pH
Salinity Range fresh-meso

Age and Growth

Male Female
Minimum Adult Size (mm)
Typical Adult Size (mm)
Maximum Adult Size (mm)
Maximum Longevity (yrs)
Typical Longevity (yrs

Reproduction

Start Peak End
Reproductive Season
Typical Number of Young
Per Reproductive Event
Sexuality Mode(s)
Mode(s) of Asexual
Reproduction
Fertilization Type(s)
More than One Reproduction
Event per Year
Reproductive Startegy
Egg/Seed Form

Impacts

Economic Impacts in Chesapeake Bay

Digitaria sanguinalis (Hairy Crabgrass) probably has no impacts in the tidal waters and wetlands of the Chesapeake Bay proper, except possibly from herbicides used to control it in lawns and fields, where it is a troublesome weed (Brown and Brown 1984).

References- Brown and Brown 1984


Economic Impacts Outside of Chesapeake Bay

Digitaria sanguinalis (Hairy Crabgrass) is a widespread weed of lawns, gardens, and fields throughout the United States (Agricultural Research Service 1971; Hitchcock and Chase 1950).

References- Agricultural Research Service 1971; Hitchcock and Chase 1950


Ecological Impacts on Chesapeake Native Species

Digitaria sanguinalis (Hairy Crabgrass) is an abundant weed in disturbed upland areas of the watershed (Brown and Brown 1984; Hitchcock and Chase 1950), but probably has few impacts on native biota in tidal wetlands.

References- Brown and Brown 1984; Hitchcock and Chase 1950


Ecological Impacts on Other Chesapeake Non-Native Species

Digitaria sanguinalis (Hairy Crabgrass) is an abundant weed in disturbed upland areas of the watershed (Brown and Brown 1984; Hitchcock and Chase 1950), but probably has few impacts on exotic biota in tidal wetlands.

References- Brown and Brown 1984; Hitchcock and Chase 1950


References

Agricultural Research Service (1971) Common weeds of the United States., In: (Eds.) . , Washington, D.C.. Pp.

Aikin, W. E. A. (1837) Catalogue of phenogamous plants and ferns, native or naturalized, growing in the vicinity of Baltimore, Maryland., Transactions of the Maryland Academy of Sciences and Literature 1: 55-91

Brereton, J. A. (1830) Prodromus of the Flora Columbiana, , Washington, D.C.. Pp.

Brown, Melvin L.; Brown, Russell G. (1984) Herbaceous Plants of Maryland, , College Park. Pp.

Brown, Melvin L.; Reveal, J. L; Broome, C. R.; Frick, George F. (1987) Comments on the vegetation of colonial Maryland, Huntia 7: 247-283

Fernald, Merritt L. (1950) Gray's Manual of Botany, In: (Eds.) . , New York. Pp.

Gleason, Henry A.; Cronquist, Arthur (1991) Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada, In: (Eds.) . , Bronx, New York. Pp.

Godfrey, R. K.; Wooten, Jean W. (1979) Aquatic and Wetland Plants of the Southeastern United States: Monocotyledones., In: (Eds.) . , Athens. Pp.

Gray, Asa (1848) A manual of botany of the northern United States., In: (Eds.) . , Boston. Pp.

Gronovius, Johannes Fredericius (1739) Flora Virginica exhibens plantas quas V. C. Johannes Clayton in Virginia observavit atque collegit., , London. Pp.

Harvill, A. M.; Bradley, Ted R.; Stevens, Charles E.; Wieboldt, Thomas F.; Ware, Donna M. E.; Ogle, Douglas W.; Ramsey, Gwynn W.; Fleming, Gary P. (1992) Atlas of the Virginia Flora, , Burkeville, VA. Pp.

Hitchcock, A. S.; Chase, Agnes (1950) Manual of Grasses of the United States., In: (Eds.) . , Washington, D.C.. Pp.

Krauss, R.W.; Brown, R. G.; Rappleye, R. D.; Owens, A. B.; Shearer, C.; Hsiao, E.; Reveal, J. (1971) Checklist of plant species occurring within the hightide limits of the Chesapeake Bay, and its tributaries., , College Park, Maryland. Pp.

Leck, Mary A.; Simpson, Robert L.; Whigham, Dennis F., Leck, Charles F. (1988) Plants of the Hamilton marshes, a Delaware River freshwater tidal wetland, Bartonia 54: 1-17

1997-2024 USDA PLANTS Database.. Onine databse

Pursh, Frederick (1814) Flora Americae Septentrionalis or, a Systematic Arrangement and Description of the Plants of North America, , Hirschburg. Pp.

Resource Management Inc. (1993) National list of plant species that occur in wetlands., , Minneapolis.. Pp.

Reveal, James L. (1983) Significance of pre-1753 botanical explorations in temperate North America on Linnaeus' first edition of Species Plantarum, Phytologia 53: 1-96

Simmons, Mark P.; Ware, Donna M.; Hayden, W. John (1995) The vascular flora of the Potomac River watershed of King George County, Virginia, Castanea 60: 179-209

Wass, Melvin L. (1972) A checklist of the biota of lower Chesapeake Bay, Special Scientific Report, Virginia Institute of Marine Science 65: 1-290

1995 Conversation with Paul Fofonoff, Introduced plants in Chesapeake Bay..


Direct questions and comments to chesnemo@si.edu.

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