CYPKRACE^. (SEDGI-: FAMILY.) 521 



acute-angled nat. — Muddy banks of the Chipola River, nnd of Flat Creek, near 

 Aspalaga, Florida, to South Carolina; not common. Aug. — Culm 2° -4" 

 high, often proliferous at the joints. Umbel 6'- 12' long. Spikes 2"- 3" long. 



♦ * Bristles 6, capillari/, smooth, crisped and entangled. (Trichophorum.) 

 10. S. Eriophorum, Miilix. Culm nearly terete, with the joints remote ; 

 leaves linear, elongated, keeled; umbel terminal, decompound, spreading or 

 recurved, shorter than the 3 - 5-leavcd involucre ; spikes single or clustered, 

 ovate ; scales thin, lanceolate, obtuse ; bristles many times longer than the 

 .oblong comprcssed-3-anglcd beak-pointed nut, at length exserted, and covering 

 the spike with woolly down. (Trichophorum cyperinum, Pcrs.) — Swamps and 

 low grounds, Florida, and northward. July - Sept. — Culm 2° - 4° high. 



U. S. lineatUS, Michx. Culm 3-angled; leaves flat, linear-lanceolate; 

 umbels lateral and terminal, longer than the 1 -3-leaved involucre; spikes all 

 single, cylindrical ; scales rigid, keeled, mueronate ; bristles barely exserted ; nut 

 &a in the preceding. Swamps, Georgia, and northward. June - Aug. — Culm 

 2° - 30 high. Spikelets 3" - 4" long. 



9. ERIOPHORUM, L. Cotton-Grass. 



Spikes many-flowered. Scales imbricated in many rows. Perianth composed 

 of numerous (rarely 6) smooth and flat hairs, much longer than the scale, and 

 forming a woolly or silky tuft. Stamens commonly 3. Style 3-cleft, deciduous. 

 Nut 3angled or lenticular. — Perennials, with leafy culms, in our species, and 

 clustered or umbelled spikes. 



1. E. Virginicum, L. Culm nearly terete, rigid ; leaves narrowly linear, 

 elongated ; spikes densely clustered, nearly sessile, erect ; involucre 2 - 3-leaved ; 

 wool reddish, thrice the length of the brownish scales; nut compressed-3-angIed, 

 acute. — Bogs and swamps, Florida, and northward. June -Aug. — Culm 2°- 

 3° high. Leaves 10'- 18' long. 



2. E. polystachyon, L. Culm terete ; leaves broadly linear, 3-angled 

 at the summit ; spikes umbelled, distinct, on slender at length nodding peduncles; 

 involucre 2-leaved, shorter than the umbel; wool white, many times longer than 

 the dark brown scales ; nut obtuse. — Meadows and bogs in the upper districts, 

 Georgia, and northward. Aug. and Sept. — Culm 1° - 2° high. Leaves 3'- 6' 

 long. 



10. FIMBRISTYLIS, Vahl. 



Spikes many-flowered. Scales imbricated in several rows. Perianth none. 

 Stamens 1-3. Style 2-c!cft, commonly flat and fringed on the margins, tumid 

 at tlu; base, deciduous. Nut lenticular. — Culms jointless, leafy at the base. 

 Involucre 1 -several-leaved. Spikes terminal, umbellate or clustered. 



* Spikes umbelled. 

 1. P. spadicea, Vahl. Perennial; culms clustered, nearly terete, rigid 

 (2° -3° high) ; leaves long, linear or filiform, concave, rough on the margins; 

 umbel simple or compound, erect ; involucre 2 -3-leaved; spikes ovate or ob- 

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