Melica decipiens

Melica decipiens is a species of grass that can be found in the mountains of Cordoba and San Luis provinces of Argentina.

Description
The species is perennial with elongated rhizomes and erect culms which are 25 – long. The leaf-sheaths are tubular and are closed on one end with the surface being glabrous. The leaf-blades are flat, stiff, and are 5 – long by 2 – wide. They are also scabrous, with the same goes for margins and surface while the apex is attenuate. The membrane is eciliated, 1.5 - 2.5 mm long and is lacerate. The panicle itself is open, linear, is 12 – long and carry 4–6 fertile spikelets.

Spikelets are obovate, solitary, 7.5 - 10 mm long and have pediceled fertile spikelets. The pedicels are ciliate, curved, filiform, and hairy above. The spikelets have 2 fertile florets which are diminished at the apex while the sterile florets are barren, lanceolate, clumped and are 2 – long. Its rhachilla have scaberulous internodes while the floret callus is glabrous. Both the upper and lower glumes are keelless, membranous, and have acute apexes but have different size and description; Lower glume is obovate and is 7.5 – long while upper one is elliptic and is 5 – long. The species' lemma have eciliated margins while its fertile one is chartaceous, elliptic, and is 4.5 – long by 2 – wide. Its palea have ciliolated keels and is of the same length as fertile lemma. Flowers are fleshy, glabrous and truncate. They also grow together and are 0.2 mm long with 2 lodicules. The 3 anthers are 1 - 2 mm long. The fruits are 3 mm long and ellipsoid. They also have caryopsis with additional pericarp and linear hilum.