CTPERACKJ?. (sedge FAMILY.) 641 



lina. — Culms filiform, 1°-1^° I'ig'i, "nd, like the sheaths of the linear Icavca, 

 roughened downward. 



48. C. digitalis, WiUd. Sterile spike small, sessile, or nearly so ; fertile 

 spikes commonly 3, remote, very slender, loosely 5 - 8-tiowered, all on long 

 bristle-like peduncles, the lowest near the base of the culm and {generally re- 

 clining ; perigynia alternate, ovoid, witii a short and spreading eiiiire point, 

 twice the length of the ovate acute green-keeled scale ; leaves linear, green ; 

 culms 6' -12' high. — Var. glauca. Leaves and bracts wider (4"-G"), glau- 

 cous, 3-nerved ; fertile spikes thicker, the two upper ones appro.ximate and sliort- 

 peduncled ; perigynia larger, thrice the length of the barely -pointed scale. — 

 Low grounds, Florida, and northward. 



Bracts sheathing, Itajless or nearly so : scales broicn or black. 



49. C. plantaginea, Lam. Fertile spikes 3 - 4, remote, the lowest at the 

 base of tlie culm, linear, erect, loosely few-flowered, the peduncles mostly in- 

 cluded in the brown leafless sheaths ; perigynia oblong-obovate, short-pointed, 

 longer tiian the ovate acute black scale. — Mountains of North Carolina, and 

 northward. — Leaves all radical, 1' or more wide, about as long as the slender 

 culm. 



50. C. Caroliniana, Buckley. Fertile spikes 3, loosely 3 - 6-flowered, 

 remote, all on long bristle-like drooping peduncles, wljieh are partly included 

 in the sheaths of the short bracts ; the lowest near the base of the culm ; peri- 

 gynia ovoid, short-pointed, ratlier longer than the oblong mucronate dark-browa 

 scale. — Table Mountain, South Carolina, Buckley. — Radical leaves 4" - 6" 

 wide, 3-nerved, exceeding the tufted culms. 



51. C. Baltzellii, Chapm. Sterile spike rigid, often with a few fertile 

 flowers at the base ; fertile spikes 3-6, linear-cylindrical, closely many-flowered, 

 one (rarely two) on an erect peduncle which is included in a leafless sheath at 

 the base of tlie sterile spike, the others on long recurved or spreading radical 

 peduncles, commonly sterile at the summit ; perigynia obovate-oblong, pubescent, 

 abruptly short-pointed, as long as the obovate obtuse mucronate reddish-brown 

 scale. — Dry sandy soil. Middle Florida. — Leaves all radical, 2" -4" wide, 

 glaucous, very rough above, longer than the culm. 



= = Perigynia with few and scattered nerves, commonly a little inflated, straight- 

 beaked or pointed: spikes all, or the lowest, on long and mostly nodding peduncles : 

 bracts leafy. 



t Spilces linear or filiform, loosely flowered : perigynia lanceolate or oblong. 



52. C. venusta, Dew. Fertile spikes 3-5, linear (r-l|^' long), remote, 

 or the two upper ones approximate and erect ; perigynia oblong, acute at each 

 end, rough-liairy, notched at the orifice, twice as long as the oblong obtuse 

 scale. —Low banks of streams, Florida to North Carolina. — Culms 2° -3° 

 high. Sheatlis of the linear leaves very rough. 



53. C. debilis, Michx. Fertile spikes 3-5, remote, filiform, drooping ; 

 perigynia alternate, lanceolate, smooth, acute at the base, tapering into a 2-cleft 

 beak, twice as long as the oblong obtuse one-nerved scale ; sheaths smooth. — 



46 



