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Digitaria nuda

Schumach.

Naked crabgrass

Poaceae Edible: Seeds, Cereal, Grains 37 iNaturalist observations

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(c) Mike Ross, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Mike Ross

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Description

An annual grass. The stems are elbowed and reach 1 m high. It is creeping and can form mats. The stems are 10-50 cm long. The seeds are about 0.8 mm long.

Edible Uses

The seeds are harvested as a cereal grain. It is used as a famine food.

Distribution

It is a tropical plant. It grows in waste places across West Africa.

Where It Grows

Africa, Argentina, Botswana, Brazil, Burkina Faso, Cuba, East Africa, Gambia, Ghana, Guiana, Guianas, Guinea, Guinée, Guinea-Bissau, Guyana, Haiti*, Indonesia, Malawi, Mauritania, Mauritius Mexico*, Mozambique, Nigeria, North America, Paraguay, Puerto Rico, SE Asia, Sierra Leone, Southern Africa, South America*, Suriname, USA, Venezuela, Virgin Islands, West Africa, West Indies*, Zambia, Zimbabwe,

Other Information

It is a famine food.

Synonyms

Digitaria digitata BuseDigitaria jamaicensis Spreng.Panicum sanguinale L. var. digitatum (Sw.) Hack ex Urb.

Also Known As

Harkiya, Ndiwi, Sheshe

References (7)

  • Burkill, H. M., 1985, The useful plants of west tropical Africa, Vol. 2. Kew.
  • Dalziel, J. M., 1937, The Useful plants of west tropical Africa. Crown Agents for the Colonies London.
  • Gallagher, D. E., 2010, Farming beyond the escarpment: Society, Environment, and Mobility in Precolonial Southeastern Burkina Faso. PhD University of Michigan.
  • Peters, C. R., O'Brien, E. M., and Drummond, R.B., 1992, Edible Wild plants of Sub-saharan Africa. Kew. p 21
  • Plants of Haiti Smithsonian Institute http://botany.si.edu/antilles/West Indies
Show all 7 references
  • Vodouhe, R. S. et al, Fonio: A treasure for West Africa. Genetic Resources Multiplication and Utilization p 219
  • World Checklist of Useful Plant Species 2020. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

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