Festucaria Link 1844, illegitimate homonym not Heist. ex Fabr. 1759
Ctenopsis De Not.
Distomischus Dulac
Prosphysis Dulac
Loretia Duval-Jouve
[Narduretia Villar
Vulpia is a widespread genus of plants in the
grass family, native to many countries around the world and naturalized in many of the nations to which it is not native. It is most common in temperate regions.[2][3][4][5][6]
Vulpia is a part of a group of species known as fescues;Vulpia is sometimes considered a subset of the main
fescue genus, Festuca. Many of these fescues are considered
noxious weeds in many places.[7]Vulpia myuros is a notable weed.
The genus is named for Johann Samuel Vulpius (1760-1846), a German botanist.[8]
Vulpia microstachys (Nutt.) Munro - small fescue - western USA, British Columbia, Baja California (incl Guadalupe Island), Peru
Vulpia muralis (Kunth) Nees - Mediterranean, Azores, Canary Islands, Balkans, Hungary, Saudi Arabia; introduced in Australia, scattered locales in South America
Vulpia myuros (L.) C.C.Gmel. - rat-tail fescue - Africa, Eurasia; introduced in Australia, the Americas, various islands
Vulpia octoflora (Walter) Rydb. - widespread in North America; also Chile + Argentina
Vulpia pectinella (Delile) Boiss. - North Africa, Middle East from Morocco to Iraq
Vulpia persica (Boiss. & Buhse) Krecz. & Bobrov - Asia from Saudi Arabia to Kazakhstan
^Gmelin, Carl (Karl) Christian. 1805. Flora Badensis, Alsatica Et Confinium Regionum Cis Et Transrhenana Plantas a Lacu Bodamico Usque Ad Confluentem Mosellae Et Rheni Sponte Nascentes exhibens secundum systema sexuale cum iconibus ad naturam dileneatis 1: 8