little bluestem

Schizachyrium scoparium (little bluestem) header image

 

Schizachyrium scoparium (Michx.) Nash

Alternate Common Names: prairie beardgrass, broom beardgrass

Scientific Synonym: Andropogon scoparius, Michx.

Family:grass family (Poaceae)

Functional Group: warm season grass

Description 

Life cycle and growth form

Perennial, short rhizomes, fibrous roots, grows in dense clumps.

Height: 1-3 ft  

Schizachyrium scoparium (little bluestem) growth form
Leaves and stem
little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium) seedling

Leaf blades narrow, up to 8 in long, flat or folded lengthwise, green to blue-green in color, usually hairless; sheaths strongly flattened and often hairless; ligule is a fringed (ciliate) membrane; nodes are hairless and purple; flowering stem is hairless and erect with many short branches, bluish to reddish-purple in color.

Flower, fruit and seedhead

Fruit/seedhead: Single spikes, about 1 in long, arise from upper leaf axils, spikelets spread out as they mature, appearing as white, feathery appendages that arch; entire spikelets fall off at maturity and are weakly dispersed by the wind up to several feet from the parent plant.

Pollination: wind

little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium) seedheads
Seed

Seed characteristics 

Seeds per ounce: 15,000 (IA NRCS)

1000 seed weight: 1.50 g (Seed Information Database)

Description: [shape, length, color, attached structures]

Typical seed test 

PLS: 68% (n = 12)

Purity: 71% (n = 12)

Germination: 35% (n = 11)

Dormant: 59% (n = 11)

(averages obtained from n tests of purchased seed lots)

Habitat and range

‌Habitat: Dry to dry-mesic soil; full sun; prairies, glades, dunes, roadsides, along railroads, woodland openings, scrubby barrens, abandoned fields; Wetland Indicator Status is Facultative Upland (FACU) for the Midwest; well-drained, moderately moist soils are preferred for seed production.

Conservation status: Global- G5, secure (NatureServe) 

little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium) BONAP map

 

General Comments

Little bluestem is a dominant component on dry or well-drained soils within the tallgrass prairie region. Careful site selection, seedbed preparation, and weed control are critical to successful establishment from seed. No-till drilling with a native seed drill into cropland following a glyphosate-resistant crop, soybeans for example, is an excellent method. It takes two to three years for a stand to develop and reach peak yields.

 

Recommendations for Seed Production 

Establishment for seed production

‌Direct seeding

Row spacing:36 in24 in12 insolid stand
PLS lbs/acre:  2.43.26.48.0

Seeding depth: 1/4 in

Seeding method: native seed drill

Seeding time: late spring to early summer.

Weed control: Prepare clean, very firm, weed free seedbed prior to seeding.

 

‌Greenhouse

Seed pre-treatment: No stratification necessary. Germination of grass seed usually improves with proper storage (cool, dry conditions) throughout the first year after harvest.

Sowing: Sow seed in greenhouse two months before last frost free date at 1/4 in depth.

Transplanting: Transplant after all danger of frost.

Stand management

Weeds: Mow stands high (6–12 in) in the first growing season to prevent weed canopy from shading seedlings. Imazepic can be used to control grass and broadleaf weeds in established stands. Pre-emergent grass and broadleaf herbicides can be used for weed control. Always check chemical labels.

Pests: None noted.

Diseases: No significant issues noted in TPC production plots, however, a leaf spot fungus is known to infect little bluestem and related grass species.

Seed production

Schizachyrium scoparium (little bluestem) yield graphFirst harvest: Flowering and seed set end of second growing season from direct seeding, three years for stand to fill out.

Yield: 30-100 bulk pounds/acre

Stand life: Peak harvests third year and after. If seed yields decline, stands can be chiseled to reinvigorate. We do not apply fertilizer to TPC plots, but this may improve seed yield. Annual late spring fire helps control weeds and increase flowering and seed production. (Note: These recommendations are strictly for production fields, NOT REMNANT PRAIRIES). Productive stand life 10-20 years or more.

Flowering date: Late July to late August.

Seed maturity/Harvest date: Late September to October.

Seed retention: Shattering is moderate, beginning in late September. Much of the variation in seed yield at TPC appears to be due to harvest timing, particularly waiting too long.

Harvest date range at TPC (2003-2022): Sept 5 - Oct 29

Recommended harvest method: Stripper or combine at hard dough to maturity, when most spikes are fluffed out and shattering is just beginning to occur.

Seed cleaning and storage

Cleaning process: Air-dry material, remove awns with a debearder or brush machine, then air-screen. Like other fluffy-seeded warm season grasses, this species may not flow particularly well through the air-screen cleaner.

Seed storage: cool/dry (33-50° F, 30-50% RH)

 

Released Germplasm 

Source Identified material: Northern Iowa Germplasm (IA Zone 1), Central Iowa Germplasm (IA Zone 2), Southern Iowa Germplasm (IA Zone 3), Northern Missouri Germplasm, Southern Missouri Germplasm, Southlow Michigan Germplasm, Suther Germplasm

Selected germplasm: Badlands Ecotype (ND, SD), Coastal Plains Germplasm (TX, LA), Itasca Germplasm (ND), OK Select Germplasm (OK), Ozark Germplasm (MO, IL), Prairie View Indiana Germplasm (IN), STN-176 Germplasm (TX), STN-461 Germplasm (TX)

Cultivated varieties (cultivars): Ahring (Great Plains), Aldous (KS), Cimarron (OK, KS), Pastura (NM), Sims (Great Plains)

 

References

Chayka, K. (n.d.). Schizachyrium scoparium (little bluestem). Minnesota Wildflowers. https://www.minnesotawildflowers.info/grass-sedge-rush/little-bluestem 

Hilty, J. (2019). Little bluestem - Schizachyrium scoparium. Illinois Wildflowers. https://www.illinoiswildflowers.info/grasses/plants/little_bluestem.htm 

Houseal, G. A. (2007). Grasses warm season. In G. A. Houseal (Eds.), Tallgrass Prairie Center’s native seed production manual (pp. 72–73). Tallgrass Prairie Center - University of Northern Iowa.

Kartesz, J.T., The Biota of North America Program (BONAP). 2023. North American Plant Atlas. (http://bonap.net/napa). Chapel Hill, N.C. [maps generated from Kartesz, J.T. 2023. Floristic Synthesis of North America, Version 1.0. Biota of North America Program (BONAP). (in press)]

NatureServe. 2024. NatureServe Network Biodiversity Location Data accessed through NatureServe Explorer [web application]. NatureServe, Arlington, Virginia. Available https://explorer.natureserve.org/. (Accessed: February 29, 2024).

USDA NRCS National Plant Data Team. (n.d.). Schizachyrium scoparium (Michx.) Nash. USDA plants database. https://plants.usda.gov/home/plantProfile?symbol=SCSC 

USDA NRCS. Prairie View Indiana Germplasm Little Bluestem [Infographic] Retrieved February 20, 2025 from https://efotg.sc.egov.usda.gov/references/public/IN/Revised_Prairie_View_Little_bluestem.pdf 

Wipff, J. K. (2021, May 11). Schizachyrium scoparium (Michx.) Nash. Flora of North America. http://floranorthamerica.org/Schizachyrium_scoparium

Species Guide Updated 11/17/2025