

47 s 



JUNCACEAE. 

 34. Juncus alpinus Vill. Richardson's Rush. Fig. 1199. 



VOL. I. 



/. a! flints Vill. Hist. PL Dauph. 2: 233. 1787. 

 /. Richardsonianus Schult. in R. & S. Syst. 7: 201. 1829. 

 Jnnciis alpinits var. insignis Fries; Engelm. Trans. St. Louis 

 Acad. 2 : 458. 1866. 



Stems erect, 6'-2o' high in loose tufts, from creeping 

 rootstocks, i-2-leaved; stem leaf or leaves usually borne 

 below the middle ; panicle 2i'-8' high, sparse, its 

 branches strict or slightly spreading; heads 3-i2-flo\v- 

 ered; perianth i"-ii" long, the inner parts shorter 

 than the outer, obtuse, usually purplish toward the 

 apex, the three outer paler, obtuse, mucronate or acute ; 

 stamens 6, half to two-thirds as long as the perianth ; 

 anthers much shorter than the filaments; capsule ovoid- 

 oblong, slightly exceeding the perianth, straw-color or 

 brown, broadly acute or obtuse, with a short tip; seed 

 about \" in length, narrowly obovoid to oblong, apicu- 

 late, acute or acuminate at the base, lightly reticulate 

 in about 20 rows, the areolae finely cross-lined. 



Greenland to British Columbia, south to Pennsylvania. Nebraska and Washington. 



35. Juncus nodosus L. Knotted Rush. Fig. 1200. 



Juncus nodosus L. Sp. PI. Ed. 2, 466. 1762. 



Stems 6'-2 high, erect, arising singly from tuber- 

 like thickenings of a slender, nearly scaleless rootstock ; 

 stem leaves 2-4, and like the basal ones with long erect 

 blades, the upper overtopping the inflorescence ; panicle 

 shorter than its lowest bract, seldom exceeding 2:}', 

 bearing 1-30 heads ; heads spherical, several-many- 

 flowered, 3s"-6" in diameter; perianth if"-ii" long, its 

 parts lanceolate-subulate, usually reddish brown above, 

 the inner longer than the outer; stamens 6, about one- 

 half as long as the perianth; anthers equalling the fila- 

 ments; capsule lanceolate-subulate, 3-sided, i-celled, 

 exceeding the perianth ; seed oblong, acute below, 

 apiculate above, rarely more than \" long, reticulate in 

 20-30 rows, the areolae finely cross-lined. 



Nova Scotia to Virginia, Nebraska and British Columbia 

 Also in Nevada. 



36. Juncus Torreyi Coville. Torrey's Rush. Fig. 1201. 



Juncus Torreyi Coville, Bull. Torr. Club 22: 303. 1895. 

 /. nodosus var. inegaceplialus Torr. Fl. N. Y. 2: 326. 1843. 

 Juncus inegaceplialus Wood, Bot. Ed. 2, 724. 1861. Not 

 /. mcgacephalus M. A. Curtis, 1835. 



Stems 8'-4o' high; rootstock slender, with tuberiform 

 thickenings at intervals, each supporting a single stem; 

 stem stout, i-4-leaved; blade stout, terete, 5"-i" thick, 

 abruptly divergent from the stem ; inflorescence con- 

 gested, consisting of 1-20 heads, exceeded by its lowest 

 bract ; heads s"-8" in diameter ; perianth 2"-2.\" long, 

 its parts subulate, the outer longer than the inner; 

 stamens 6, about half as long as the perianth; capsule 

 subulate, 3-sided, i-celled, its beak i"-f" long, exceeding 

 the perianth and holding the valves together throughout 

 dehiscence ; seed \"-\" in length, oblong, acute at both 

 ends, reticulate in about 20 longitudinal rows, the 

 areolae finely cross-lined. 



Wet soil, Massachusetts to Ontario, Saskatchewan, Wash- 

 ington, Alabama, Texas and Arizona. 



