- ≡ Stipa blackii C.E.Hubb., Kew Bulletin 431 (1925)
Tall, very coarse, erect perennial tussock with a stout rootstock; branching extravaginal; cataphylls numerous. Leaf-sheath to 5 cm, with retrorse long weak hairs, terminating in a small tuft of white hairs to 1.5 mm. Ligule to 0.5 mm, shortly ciliate. Leaf-blade to 30 cm × 5 mm, flat or weakly rolled, scabrid, dense long hairs abaxially, adaxially and on margins retrorse long hairs. Culm to 2 m, stout, smooth, compressed, nodes densely pubescent, internodes densely pubescent below nodes, glabrous elsewhere. Panicle to 40 cm, very open, verticels widely spaced; branches long, branches and pedicels shortly scabrid. Glumes unequal, 3-nerved, becoming purple-suffused, somewhat spreading, minutely scabrid, tip erose or apiculate, < awn column; lower to 14 mm, upper to 9 mm. Lemma to 6 mm, fuscous, clothed in white hairs, lobes short (0.2 mm); coma to 3.5 mm; awn to 35 mm, stiffly hairy, 2-geniculate, column strongly twisted to 10 mm, less strongly so to 7 mm above, arista to 20 mm. Palea firm, darker than lemma, internerve hairs long, apex erose. Callus 1 mm, off-white hairs to 2 mm. Lodicules 3, 2 anterior to 1.5 mm, posterior to 1 mm. Anthers to 5.2 mm in chasmogamous flowers, to 1.5 mm in cleistogamous flowers, penicillate.
[From: Edgar and Connor (2000) Flora of New Zealand. Volume 5 (second printing).]