Millet, formerly known as millet, is also called sorghum, foxtail grass, yellow millet, and millet. Phylum Angiosperms; Class Monocotyledon; Order Gramineae; Gramineae; Genus Setaria; Liang. It is widely cultivated in the temperate and tropical regions of Eurasia, with the middle and upper reaches of the Yellow River in my country being the main cultivation areas. Extended information
One-year student. The fibrous roots are thick. The stalk is stout, upright, 0.1-1 meter or more high. The leaf sheaths of pine are wrapped around the stems and are densely verrucous or hairless. The hairs are dense near the edges and on the back where they meet the leaves. The edges are densely ciliated. The ligule is a circle of cilia. The leaves are long lanceolate or linear-lanceolate. , 10-45 cm long, 5-33 mm wide, with a pointed apex, a blunt base, rough above and slightly smooth below.
The panicle is cylindrical or spindle-shaped, usually pendulous, with more or less interruptions at the base, 10-40 cm long and 1-5 cm wide. It often varies depending on the species. The main axis is dense and soft. Hairs, bristles significantly longer or slightly longer than spikelets, yellow, brown or purple; spikelets are oval or nearly spherical, 2-3 mm long, yellow, orange or purple; the first glumes are 1/3 of the spikelets -1/2, with 3 veins; the second lemma is slightly shorter than or as long as 3/4 of the spikelet, with a blunt apex and 5-9 veins;
The first lemma is as long as the spikelet , with 5-7 veins, its inner lemma is thin and papery, lanceolate, 2/3 as long, the second lemma is as long as the first lemma, oval or spherical, hard, smooth or with fine spots. Like wrinkles, after maturity, they separate and fall off from the base of the first lemma and the glumes; the apex of the scales is uneven and microwave-shaped; the base of the style is separated; the leaf epidermal cells are the same type as Setaria.
Reference: Baidu Encyclopedia-Xiaomi