Agrostis vinealis is a species of grass known by the common names brown bentgrass and brown bent, which can be found from Russia to Mongolia, China,[1] Pakistan,[2] India[3] and Alaska.[4] It was introduced to Greenland and South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands.[5] [4]
The plant is 30– tall, wide[1] and is both perennial and caespitose with elongated rhizomes. The culms are 10– long and erect. It eciliate membrane have a ligule which is 1– long and is obtuse. Leaf-blades are flat, scabrous, and are 2– by 1–. The panicle is 2– long and is inflorescenced, lanceolate, open[3] and reddish-purple in colour.[6]
It have solitary spikelets which carry one fertile floret which have a pubescent callus. The spikelets themselves are elliptic, are 2– long and carry filiformed pedicels. The species carry an oblong fertile lemma which is 1.5– long and is keelless. The lemma itself have one awn which is 2– long and palea which is long and is as hyaline as fertile lemma. The glumes are no different in size then the spikelet. They both are lanceolate, membranous, have no lateral veins and have acute apexes. Flowers are membranous too and have two lodicules. They also carry two stigmas and three stamens the latter of which are 1– long. The fruits are caryopses with an additional pericarp and linear hilum with farinosed endosperm.[3]
In Great Britain, the species is found growing with such trees as birch, pine and oaks on an elevation of 0- at the Little Dun Fell, Westmorland, Scotland[7] while in Iceland, it is found on various hills and heathlands.[6] In China, it can be found in such provinces as Heilongjiang, Jilin, and Liaoning on an elevation of 1500–[1] while in Pakistan it is native to such provinces as Punjab, Gilgit, and Kashmir where it is found on an elevation of 2300-.[2]