92 KEPOBT OF THS STATE BOTAinSr. 



nerved, gradually tapering into a long, sharply toothed beak; scale, 

 ovate-lanceolate, rough-awned, shorter than the widely divergent 

 or horizontally spreading perigynia. 



Wet places. Very common. June, July. 



This species may be distinguished from the next by its longer- 

 stalked drooping spikes and by its smaller, many-nerved peri- 

 gynia. In cold, springy, sterile soil a small form occurs with 

 only one or two fertile spikes which are erect and nearly sessile. 

 The scales of the sterile spikes of this species and C. Pseudo- 

 Cyperus are strikingly alike. 



113. Carex tentaculata, 3Iuhl, 



Stems 18'-30' high, erect or spreading, acutely angled above 

 the middle, rough at the summit, mostly smooth below ; leaves 

 l}r"-3" wide, rough, longer than the culm ; staminate spike linear, 

 very rarely with an additional short spike at its base, H'-2y 

 long, short-peduncled ; pistillate spikes 2-4, compactly flowered, 

 ovoid-cylindrical, I'-li^' long, the upper two contiguous, sessile 

 or nearly so, erect or divergent, the others approximate or the 

 lowest sometimes remote on a short stalk, horizontally spreading ; 

 bracts leaf-like, far surpassing the culm ; perigynia turgid-ovoid, 

 thin, about lO-nerved, widely divergent when mature, tapering 

 into a long, slender, roughly-toothed beak, about twice the length 

 of the linear-lanceolate, rough-awned scale; achenium ovoid, 

 minutely papillose, with a long curved persistent style. 



"Wet places. Very common. June, July. 



This species may be identified by the short-stalked, horizontally- 

 spreading lowest s|)ike, and by the spreading, slender beaks of 

 the perigynia, which give to the spikes a coarse, comose appear, 

 ance. The name ('. lurida, Wa/iL, is applied to this plant in the 

 last edition of the Manual. Ilarely the staminate spike is fertile 

 at the apex. 



Var. Ilaccida {Baileij). Smaller, with 2,-i loosely flowered, 

 approximate, sessile spikes 1' long or less ; the fruit longer than 

 in the type and less abruptly contracted into the beak; the 

 spikes of a dull or reddish-brown color 



Var. parvula Paine. A diminutive form 5'-10' high with one 

 or two globose or ovoid sessile densely flowered reddish brown 

 spikes. 



