Paspalum distichum L.

Home

Graminae

Common names

Salt-water couch (eastern Australia), sea-shore paspalum (United States, Western Australia), grama bobo, grama salada (Peru), water couch grass (Malaysia), grama de mar (Cuba).

Description

A perennial with long creeping rhizomes and stolons; culms erect, from 15 60 cm. Leaves stiff, narrow, about 15 cm long; racemes usually two; spikelets elliptical, 3.5-4 mm long. It differs from P. paspaloides in that the upper glume is glabrous with the mid-nerve sometimes suppressed; the leaf-blades are usually narrower, up to 4 mm wide, often less, folded and with inrolled margins; racemes up to 4 cm long, often less, usually spreading horizontally or deflexed; lower glume absent (Chippendall, 1955).

Distribution

Native to Africa and the Americas; now widely distributed throughout the tropics.

Season of growth

A summer-growing perennial.

Altitude range

Just above sea-level.

Rainfall requirements

It occupies salt seepage areas in the 400-750 mm rainfall area of Western Australia. It must have moist areas in summer.

Drought tolerance

It needs good summer rain, but persists during the dry season.

Soil requirements

Adapted to marshy, brackish conditions and saline soils which are moist in summer.

Ability to spread naturally

Excellent, spreading by rhizomes and stolons.

Land preparation for establishment

Minimum. Holes can be dug or the roots pushed into the moist soil.

Sowing methods

By pieces of rooted sod, about 6-8 cm square, at 1-m intervals.

Sowing depth and cover

The top of the sod should be planted at ground level.

Sowing time and rate

Sow in spring for a good strike in Western Australia (Burvill & Marshall, 1951).

Vigour of growth and growth rhythm

Stolons remain green all year, especially if growing in water.

Response to defoliation

Once it is established it is virtually impossible to graze it out (Malcolm & Laing, 1976).

Grazing management

It is very productive if no more than half of the current season's growth (by weight) is grazed off. A 90-day grazing rest improves plant vigour and produces a forage reserve. Hard-surfaced soils can be cultivated to assist the runners' rooting. The plants should be well established before grazing is allowed.

Response to fire

Burning is not recommended as a management practice.

Dry-matter and green-matter yields

It is more productive than Sporobolus virginicus and common couch (Millington, Burvill & Marsh, 1951).

Feeding value

An important forage grass. In Suriname, Dirven (1963a, b) says the nutritional value of the grass is low and cattle grazing it are in poor condition.

Toxicity

No records of toxicity have been found.

Main attributes

Its adaptability to saline land, thus providing soil stabilization and beach protection, as well as light grazing.

Main deficiencies

Its low seed production.

Frost tolerance

Leaf-blades turn brown and deteriorate after the first frost, but stolons survive.

Latitudinal limits

About 30°N and S.

Response to light

It grows as well as Cynodon dactylon and Stenotaphrum secundatum (buffalo grass) in shade, with better winter survival.

Ability to compete with weeds

It competes very successfully with weeds.

Palatability

It is quite palatable.

Natural habitat

A littoral species occurring in sands and muds near the seashore, and in saline soils and swamps (Barnard, 1969).

Tolerance to flooding

It will tolerate waterlogged conditions and periodic flooding in salt swamps and by tidal waters (Colman & Wilson, 1960).

Fertilizer requirements

In non-salty soils it responds to phosphorus and nitrogenous fertilizers.

Genetics and reproduction

The somatic chromosome number is 2n=20, (sexual reproduction) (Bashaw, Hovin & Holt, 1970).

Seed production and harvesting

P. distichum flowers freely in summer but some clones are markedly self-sterile so that little seed is produced. Some clones are reasonably self-fertile and cross-pollination between clones may result in satisfactory seed set (Carpenter, 1958).

Economics

Used by some Angolan farmers for composting the sandy dune soil of their vegetable farms (Rose-Innes, 1977). It is a very good lawn grass where only salty water is available, yet also does well with fresh water. It is good fodder grass, but may become a serious weed in irrigation channels. It can be a useful coastal sand binder in Australia.

Animal production

No figures are available. It is a useful fodder grass which stands heavy grazing.

Further reading

Burvill, 1956; Cameron, 1959; Carpenter, 1958; Logan, 1958; Malcolm & Laing, 1976.

Dormancy

Seed shows some dormancy which seems to require cold to break (Carpenter, 1958); it germinates best at 20-30°C.

Value for erosion control

It is useful in erosion control on salted lands and areas reclaimed from tidal influences.

Tolerance to salinity

Excellent. In Western Australia it has grown successfully in salt seepage patches where the ground water just below the surface contained 3 000 mg of sodium chloride per litre. When the salt content was as high as 12 000 mg per litre however, it did not grow satisfactorily. It grows along the sea front in Suriname and is frequently flooded with sea water (Dirven, 1963a, b). It can stand lawn irrigation with water containing up to 14 000 mg per litre total soluble salts (Malcolm & Laing, 1976). Sea water is generally too saline for P. distichum.