Calamagrostis canadensis is a species of grass, having three or more varieties, in the familyPoaceae. It is known variously by the common names of bluejoint, bluejoint reedgrass, marsh reedgrass, Canadian reedgrass, meadow pinegrass, and marsh pinegrass.
Varieties
Calamagrostis canadensis takes the form of at least three varieties, including the type. The U.S. Forest Service names others.
The type variety, is C. c. var. canadensis. This is the name for C. canadensis after varieties of it were named, and is used only to differentiate it from the other, newer varieties. The common name is bluejoint
C. c. var. langsdorffii. It is also called bluejoint.
C. c. var. macouniana. It is known as Macoun's reedgrass. It was named for Canadian Botanist James Melville Macoun.
Distribution
The varieties often overlap in where they are distributed.
Most states in the U.S. have one or more varieties of C. canadensis, the most common by distribution being C. c. var. canadensis. Only Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, and Vermont have all three; and only one, Kentucky, has C. c. var. macouniana with no others. 15 states have only C. c. var. canadensis, without others ; and no state has C. c. var. langsdorffii without sharing territory with C. c. var. canadensis. 14 states have both C. c. var. canadensis and C. c. var. macouniana, without C. c. var. langsdorffii ; and only seven have both C. c. var. canadensis and C. c. var. langsdorffii, and no C. c. var. macouniana
C. canadensis can be found in many types of habitat, including forest, taiga, and tundra in subarctic regions. It is the most common and widespread Calamagrostis species on the continent.
Description
It is a perennial grass with a branching stem reaching heights between 60 centimeters and 1.5 meters. The flat, drooping leaves are rough with tiny hairs. The inflorescence is up to 25 centimeters long and may be open and loose or narrow and densely packed with spikelets. Each spikelet is about half a centimeter long and purplish in color. It is a palatable food plant for livestock and wild grazing animals. It is a tough rhizomatous grass that provides soil stability in wet areas and is one of the first plants to reestablish on sites of recentoil spills. It can be a nuisance on sites of forest restoration, because it can outcompete conifer seedlings.