AskDefine | Define fescue

Dictionary Definition

fescue n : grass with wide flat leaves cultivated in Europe and America for permanent pasture and hay and for lawns [syn: fescue grass, meadow fescue, Festuca elatior]

User Contributed Dictionary

English

Etymology

Old French festu (modern fétu), from Proto-Romance festu, from Latin festuca ‘stalk, stem, straw’.

Pronunciation

IPA: /'fɛskju:/

Noun

  1. A straw, wire, stick, etc., used chiefly to point out letters to children when learning to read.
    • 1997: ‘Now then,’ Mason rapping upon the Table’s Edge with a sinister-looking Fescue of Ebony, whose List of Uses simple Indication does not quite exhaust, whilst the Girls squirm pleasingly — Thomas Pynchon, Mason & Dixon
  2. A hardy grass commonly used to border golf fairways in temperate climates. Any member of the genus Festuca.

Extensive Definition

Fescue (Festuca) is a genus of about 300 species of perennial tufted grasses, belonging to the grass family Poaceae (subfamily Pooideae). The genus has a cosmopolitan distribution, although the majority of the species are found in cool temperate areas, such as the transition zone and Canada. The genus is closely related to ryegrass (Lolium), and recent evidence from phylogenetic studies using DNA sequencing of plant mitochondrial DNA shows that the genus lacks monophyly. As a result plant taxonomists have placed several species, including the forage grasses, tall fescue and meadow fescue, formerly belonging to the genus Festuca into the genus Lolium.
Fescues range from small grasses only 100 mm tall or less with very fine thread-like leaves less than 1 mm wide, to tall grasses up to 2 m tall with large leaves up to 600 mm (2 feet) long and 20 mm (3/4 in.) broad.
Fescue pollen is a significant contributor to hay fever.

Uses

The fescues contain some species which are important grasses for both lawns (particularly the fine-leaved species, highly valued for bowling greens) and as pasture and hay for livestock, being a highly nutritious stock feed. They are also used in soil erosion control programs, most notably tall fescue, one cultivar of which, Kentucky 31 (Festuca arundinacea), was used in land reclamation during the dust bowl period in the 1930s in the US.
Fescue is sometimes used as feed for horses. However, fescue poisoning, which results from a fungus, is a risk for pregnant mares. Occurring in the last three months of pregnancy, fescue poisoning increases the risk of spontaneous abortion, stillbirths, retained placenta, absent milk production, and prolonged pregnancy. Incorporating legumes into the fescue can be a way to increase livestock gains and conception rates, even if the fescue is infected.
Fescue may also cause a type of cancer in the colon of the Horse which will result in a slow painful death for the horse.

Selected species

References

External links

  • How to Select Grass Seed Information and Tips from Greenview
  • [http://imagedb.calsnet.arizona.edu:8080/imagedb/servlet/DBDisplayTaxon?tdisplay=4&taxon_name=Festuca University of Arizona Extension Service], flora and fauna image gallery
fescue in Catalan: Festuca
fescue in Czech: Kostřava
fescue in Danish: Svingel
fescue in German: Schwingel
fescue in Spanish: Festuca
fescue in French: Fétuque
fescue in Upper Sorbian: Dornica
fescue in Icelandic: Vinglar
fescue in Italian: Festuca (botanica)
fescue in Lithuanian: Eraičinas
fescue in Polish: Kostrzewa
fescue in Portuguese: Festuca
fescue in Quechua: Ichhu-ichhu
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