34 2 



CYPERACEAE. 



VOL. I 



9. R. fusca. 



10. 7?. gracileuta, 

 n, R. S mal Hi. 



Spikelets few-several in rather loose clusters. 

 Achene smooth. 



Leaves setaceous ; achene obovate, shining. ' 

 Leaves narrowly linear. 

 Achene broadly oval. 

 Achene narrowly obovate. 

 Achene transversely wrinkled. 



Spikelets ovoid, in erect cymose clusters ; achene longer than the bristles. 



Leaves flat; spikelets nearly or quite sessile. 12. R. cymosa. 



Leaves involute ; spikelets distinctly pedicelled. 13. R. Torreyana. 



Spikelets spindle-shaped, in drooping panicles; bristles long. 14. R. inexpansa.- 



i. Rynchospora corniculata (Lam.) A. Gray. Horned Rush. Fig. 841. 



Sclwcinis coruiculatus Lam. Tabl. Encycl. i: 137. 1791. 

 R. corniculata A. Gray, Ann. Lye. N. Y. 3 : 205. 1835. 

 Rhynchospora corniculata macrostachya Britton, Trans. N. 



Y. Acad. Sci. n : 84. 1892. 

 R. macrostachya Torr. Ann. Lye. N. Y. 3 : 206. 1835. 



Culm obtusely triangular, stout or slender, smooth, 

 3-7 tall. Leaves flat, broadly linear, 6'-i8' long, 

 3 "-8" wide, rough-margined ; umbels terminal and 

 axillary, sometimes i broad, usually compound; spike- 

 lets spindle-shaped, 4" -6" long in flower, capitate at 

 the ends of the rays and raylets ; primary rays slender, 

 sometimes 6' long ; scales lanceolate, thin, acute, light 

 brown; bristles about 6, subulate or filiform, rigid, 

 upwardly scabrous, shorter or longer than the achene ; 

 style subulate, entire or minutely 2-toothed at the apex, 

 2-4 times longer than the achene, upwardly scabrous, 

 -h'-i' long, persistent and much exserted beyond the 

 scales when mature; achene obovate, flat, 2" long, dark 

 brown, smooth, its surface minutely cellular-reticulated. 



In swamps, Massachusetts to Florida, west to Ohio, Mis- 

 souri, Kansas and Texas. Consists of numerous races, 

 differing in length of bristles and inflorescence. July-Sept. 



2. Rynchospora pallida M. A. Curtis. Pale 



Beaked-rush. Fig. 842. 

 R. pallida M. A. Curtis, Am. Journ. Sci. (II.) 7 : 409. 1849. 



Rootstocks slender, culms sharply triangular, ii-2i 

 tall. Leaves \"-\" wide, flattish, nearly smooth, the 

 lowest reduced to many-nerved lanceolate acuminate 

 scales ; spikelets numerous, spindle-shaped, narrow, 

 2"-3" long, aggregated in a compound convex terminal 

 head, or occasionally also in a filiform-stalked cluster 

 from the upper axil; uppermost leaves subulate, little 

 exceeding the spikelets ; scales pale greenish-brown, 

 lanceolate, acuminate; bristles minute and early decidu- 

 ous, or wanting; style 2-cleft; achene lenticular, obo- 

 vate-oblong, smooth, brown, somewhat shining, i" long, 

 tipped by a short tubercle. 



In bogs, New Jersey to North Carolina. Aug.-Sept. 



3. Rynchospora oligantha A. Gray. Few- 

 flowered Beaked-rush. Fig. 843. 



R. oligantha A. Gray, Ann. Lye. N. Y. 3: 212. 1835. 



Rootstocks short, culms tufted, almost thread-like, 

 leafy only toward the base, 6'-i6' tall. Leaves filiform, 

 resembling and shorter than the culm or sometimes 

 equalling it; spikelets 1-4, terminal, narrowly oblong, 

 acute, 3 "-4" long, sessile or peduncled, subtended by 

 I or 2 "filiform bracts ; scales ovate, pale brown, acute, 

 cuspidate : bristles usually 6, densely plumose below the 

 middle, upwardly scabrous above, equalling or shorter 

 than the achene ; style 2-cleft ; achene obovoid-oblong, 

 obtuse, turgid-lenticular, pale brown, dull, transversely 

 wrinkled ; tubercle with a flat depressed border and a 

 flattened conic acute central projection about one-fifth 

 as long as achene. 



In wet soil, New Jersey to Florida and Texas. June-Aug. 



