• Reset your password

Main navigation

  • Home
  • About
    • Methodology
    • A Brief History of PRE
    • Funding and Support
  • Evaluations
  • Plants
  • Organizations
  • Community
  • Projects

User account menu

  • Log in
PRE — Plant Risk Evaluator

Paspalum vaginatum

by Forest and Kim Starr
Common Name(s)
Seashore paspalum, Biscuit grass , Saltwater couch, Silt grass
Synonym(s)
Digitaria foliosa, Digitaria paspalodes var. longipes, Digitaria tristachya, Digitaria vaginata, Digitaria platicaulis, Panicum vaginatum

Is this plant a cultivar?  No

Life History:  Perennial

Growth Form:  grass

Africa: Kenya; Tanzania, Cape Verde, Somalia, Angola, Mozambique, Namibia; Eastern and Western Cape of South Africa, KwaZulu-Natal, Benin, Cote D'lvoire, Gambia, Ghana, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Zaire, Madagascar, Mauritius, Reunion
Asia: Oman, Yemen, China (Hainan; Yunnan), Ryukyu Islands in Japan, Taiwan, Sri Lanka, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Papua New Guinea
Australia: New South Wales, Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia, Victoria, Western Australia
Northern America: Mexico (Baja Sur; San Luis Potosi; Tamaulipas; Campeche; Colima; Jalisco; Puebla; Quintana Roo; Tabasco; Veracruz; Yucatan), United States (New Mexico; Texas; Alabama; Florida; Georgia; Louisiana; Mississippi; North Carolina; South Carolina)
Southern America: Brazil, Caribbean, Antigua, St. Vincent, Virgin Islands, French Guiana, Guyana, Venezuela, Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru
Central America: Belize; Costa Rica; El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama

Seashore paspalum is a perennial grass in the Poaceae family with rhizomes and/or stolons. The stems grow 10 to 79 centimeters tall. The leaf blades are 10 to 19 centimeters long and may be hairless to slightly hairy and are usually blue-green in color.

Used as truf grass and for erosion. Many cultivars are available. Can be irrigated with sea water.

External Resources
GBIF Species Page
USDA Plants Database page
Tropicos Species Page
US National Germplasm Database
These links will open new browser tabs.

Images

by Forest and Kim Starr
image info

Copyright © 2025 PRETool.org - All rights reserved