Federal Noxious Weed: Do Not Plant
                            
                            
                    
                        
                            Common Name: African feather grass 
                        
                        
                            Type: Ornamental grass
                        
                        
                            Family: Poaceae
                        
                        
                            Native Range: Southern and eastern Africa
                        
                        
                            Zone: 8 to 10
                        
                        
                            Height: 3.00 to 6.00 feet
                        
                        
                            Spread: 2.00 to 3.00 feet
                        
                        
                            Bloom Time: June to August
                        
                        
                            Bloom Description: Green to yellow-green sometimes tinged with purple, yellow or brown
                        
                        
                            Sun: Full sun to part shade
                        
                        
                            Water: Medium
                        
                        
                            Maintenance: Low
                        
                        
                                Suggested Use: Naturalize
		                    
                                Flower: Showy
		                    
                                Tolerate: Clay Soil
		                    
                        
                        
                     
                    
                 
                
                    Culture
                    Warm season tender perennial grass that is winter hardy to USDA Zones 8-10.   Best in moist, medium fertile, well-drained soils in full sun.  Tolerates light shade.  Performs well in a variety of soils including both clay and sandy loams.  Established plants have good drought tolerance.  Spreads, sometimes invasively, by self-seeding and rhizomes to form large colonies which choke out most other plants.
	             
                
                    Noteworthy Characteristics
                    Pennisetum macrourum, commonly called African feather grass, is a tender perennial grass that is native to southern Africa, tropical Africa and the Arabian Peninsula (Yemen).  It has been introduced in various other parts of the world.  Notwithstanding its ornamental beauty, it is noted for spreading invasively by rhizomes and self-seeding in parts of the southern U.S. and Australia.  This grass is included on the U.S. Noxious Weed List plus the regulated lists of several states (Alabama, California, Oregon, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Massachusetts and Vermont).  This is a rapid-growing, clump-forming grass that produces upright, arching, narrow, linear green leaves growing in dense clumps to 3-4' tall with unbranched stems (culms) topped by cylindrical flower panicles which rise above the leaves to 5-6’ tall.  
Light green leaves (to 1/2” wide) grow from the base of the plant to 45” tall.  Leaf margins are sometimes purple-tinted.  Leaves consist of a leaf sheath which partially encloses the stem and a spreading linear blade.  Flowers appear in late spring and summer in erect or drooping, long, thin, cat-tail-like panicles (each to 4-16” long x 3/4” across) which are green or yellow green sometimes tinged with purple, yellow or brown.  Flower spikelets are surrounded by finely-barbed feathery bristles.  Flowers turn straw colored as they mature.
Genus name comes from the Latin penna meaning "feather" and seta meaning "bristle" in reference to the flowers having long, feathery bristles.
Specific epithet comes from the Greek words macros meaning long and oura meaning tail in reference to the flower spikes.
Common name refers to native territory (Africa) and feathery bristles on the flower heads.
	             
                
                    Problems
                    No serious insect or disease problems.  Can be weedy and invasive.
	             
                
                    Uses
                    Ornamental grass for landscape areas where rhizomatous spread is not a problem.  Containers which can be overwintered indoors in areas where plants are not winter hardy.