Wood Reed, Cinna arundinacea, is a native warm-season grass that grows in semi-shaded woodland areas. It can be found in nearly every county in the state, but is more common in southern Illinois.
Identifying characteristics
Wood Reed grows about 4-6 feet tall. Its leaves and leaf sheaths (the part of the leaf that wraps around the stem) have a blue-gray color to them, which can make it stand out from the surrounding foliage. The leaves tend to twist near their base, showing the shiny undersides face up. Wood Reed leaves have a long, membranous ligule at their base, which often turns brown by the end of summer and into fall.
When it blooms in late summer, Wood Reed produces a panicle inflorescence, which is a branched flowering cluster. The spikelets (flowering units) are linear and densely packed along branches. They start off green in color and turn straw-colored in the fall. The branches tend to hang off one side of the rachis (stem of the inflorescence) once it is done flowering and produces seeds.



