The photo is of a green foxtail flower.

Green foxtail – Setaria viridis

Setaria viridis (L.) Beauv.

Poaceae (Grass family)

MI Status

Non-native

Life cycle

Erect summer annual.

Leaves

Leaves are hairless, rough, rolled in the bud, and up to 12 inches long. Leaf sheaths are hairless except for short hairs along the margin.

Ligule

Hairy.

Stems

Erect, mostly 3-foot-tall stems are branched and clump-forming at the base. Stems are usually round but are occasionally flattened in cross-section.

Flowers and fruit

The seedhead is a dense, cylinder-shaped, foxtail-like panicle with green to purple bristles. Usually, erect to slightly nodding seedheads are capable of producing prolific amounts of oval to egg-shaped, yellowish-brown seeds.

Reproduction

Seeds.

Similar weeds

Giant foxtail (S. faberi Herrm.)
Differs by having a larger, up to 7-foot-tall stature, leaves with numerous short hairs on the upper surface, and longer, highly nodding panicles.
Yellow foxtail [S. glauca (L.) Beauv.]
Differs by having long, wispy hairs on the upper leaf surface near the stem, a panicle with yellowish-brown bristles, and a yellow-to-light-brown seedhead at maturity.

The photo is of the stem of green foxtail.  It is a close-up of the collar region.
Green foxtail collar region
The photo is of a green foxtail seedhead with a dense cylinder-shaped panicle with green to purple bristles.
Green foxtail seedhead

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