Plants usually perennial, rarely annual; terrestrial or aquatic; rhizomatous or cespitose; synoecious. Culms 20–150 cm (occasionally longer in floating mats), erect or decumbent, often rooting at the nodes, branched or unbranched. Leaves equitably distributed along the culm; sheaths open; auricles absent; ligules membranous; pseudopetioles absent; blades aerial, linear to broadly lanceolate, flat or folded, sometimes involute when dry. Inflorescences terminal panicles, usually exserted, axillary panicles sometimes also present; disarticulation beneath the spikelets. Spikelets bisexual, with 1 floret; florets laterally compressed, linear to suborbicular in sideview. Glumes absent; calluses not stipelike, glabrous; lemmas and paleas subequal, chartaceous to coriaceous, ciliate-hispid or glabrous, tightly clasping along the margins; lemmas 5-veined, obtuse or acute to acuminate, sometimes mucronate, usually unawned; paleas 3-veined, unawned; lodicules 2; anthers 1, 2, 3, or 6; styles 2, bases fused, stigmas laterally exserted, plumose. Caryopses laterally compressed; embryos about 1/3 as long as the caryopses; hila linear. x = 12. Named for Johann Daniel Leers (1727–1774), a German botanist and pharmacist.
Leersia is a genus of about 17 aquatic to mesophytic species, growing primarily in tropical and warm-temperate regions. Five species are native to the Flora region. Leersia is closely allied to Oryza. It is unusual in the variability in stamen numbers among its species.
SELECTED REFERENCE Pyrah, G.L. 1969. Taxonomic and distributional studies in Leersia (Gramineae). Iowa State Coll. J. Sci. 44:215–270.