Native Plants

Brown Bentgrass

Agrostis vinealisvinealis

USDA symbol: AGVIV3

perennial grass

Alaska: native

If you’re looking to add authentic native character to your northern garden, brown bentgrass might just be the unassuming hero you never knew you needed. This perennial grass species calls Alaska home and brings that rugged, wild beauty that only true natives can provide. Brown bentgrass (Agrostis vinealisvinealis) is a ...

Brown Bentgrass: A Native Alaskan Grass for Cold Climate Gardens

If you’re looking to add authentic native character to your northern garden, brown bentgrass might just be the unassuming hero you never knew you needed. This perennial grass species calls Alaska home and brings that rugged, wild beauty that only true natives can provide.

What Makes Brown Bentgrass Special?

Brown bentgrass (Agrostis vinealisvinealis) is a perennial grass that’s as tough as the Alaskan wilderness it comes from. As a member of the graminoid family, it shares company with other grasses, sedges, and rushes – the backbone plants that often get overlooked but do the heavy lifting in natural ecosystems.

This grass is exclusively native to Alaska, making it a fantastic choice for gardeners in the Last Frontier who want to celebrate their local flora. There’s something deeply satisfying about growing a plant that has been thriving in your exact location for thousands of years before you arrived.

Where You’ll Find Brown Bentgrass

Currently, brown bentgrass is documented as native only to Alaska. This limited geographic distribution makes it a true regional specialty – think of it as the botanical equivalent of a local craft beer that you can only get in one place.

  • Species observed
  • No observations

Should You Grow Brown Bentgrass?

Here’s where things get a bit tricky. While brown bentgrass has excellent native credentials for Alaskan gardeners, detailed information about its specific growing requirements, appearance, and garden performance is limited. This isn’t uncommon with some native grasses – they’re often the quiet workhorses of the plant world that don’t get as much attention as flashier flowering plants.

What We Know About Growing Conditions

As an Alaskan native, brown bentgrass is undoubtedly adapted to:

  • Cold temperatures and harsh winters
  • Short growing seasons
  • Variable moisture conditions typical of Alaska
  • Potentially acidic soils common in northern regions

Garden Design Potential

Native grasses like brown bentgrass can serve several important roles in landscape design:

  • Ground cover for naturalized areas
  • Erosion control on slopes
  • Wildlife habitat and food source
  • Low-maintenance lawn alternative
  • Authentic native plant gardens

The Reality Check

If you’re an Alaskan gardener intrigued by brown bentgrass, you might need to do some detective work. Contact local native plant societies, botanical gardens, or university extension services for more specific information about obtaining and growing this grass. Sometimes the most interesting native plants are the ones that require a bit of extra effort to learn about and source.

For gardeners outside Alaska, consider exploring native grasses in your own region instead. Every area has its own special native grasses that are perfectly adapted to local conditions and will give you that same authentic, rooted-in-place feeling that brown bentgrass provides for Alaskans.

Bottom Line

Brown bentgrass represents the fascinating world of regional native plants – species that are perfectly at home in their specific corner of the world but remain somewhat mysterious to the broader gardening community. If you’re in Alaska and passionate about native plants, this grass could be a wonderful addition to your landscape, though you’ll likely need to connect with local experts to learn more about successfully growing and sourcing it.

Agrostis vinealisvinealis is also known as...

Often we refer to plants by their common names. When shopping for plants the scientific name is the best way to positively identify the plant species you desire. But some plants have more than one name! While it doesn't happen often, nurseries might display one name while you're searching for another. Agrostis vinealisvinealis is also known as:

Agrostis canina var. arida | USDA symbol: AGCAA2
Agrostis canina ssp. montana | USDA symbol: AGCAM3
Agrostis canina var. montana | USDA symbol: AGCAM4
Agrostis stricta | USDA symbol: AGST5
Agrostis trinii | USDA symbol: AGTR4
Agrostis vinealis ssp. trinii | USDA symbol: AGVIT

Why do some plants have more than one name? Over time plant species may be renamed for a few reasons:

  1. Botanists in different regions named the same plant without knowing it had already been classified.
  2. A species was reclassified after scientific advances in, for example, DNA analysis.
  3. Slight variations within a species are sometimes mistakenly identified as entirely new species.

Classification

Group: Monocot
Kingdom: Plantae - Plants
Subkingdom: Tracheobionta - Vascular plants
Superdivision: Spermatophyta - Seed plants
Division: Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants
Class: Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass: Commelinidae
Order: Cyperales
Family: Poaceae Barnhart - Grass family
Genus: Agrostis L. - bentgrass

Species: Agrostis vinealis Schreb. - brown bentgrass

Subspecies: Agrostis vinealis Schreb. ssp. vinealis - brown bentgrass

Plant data source: USDA, NRCS 2025. The PLANTS Database. https://plants.usda.gov,. 2/25/2025. National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC USA