• \ PERA< K.E. 659 



Order CYPERACE^E. 



CYPERUS, L. 



C. ligularis, L. (not of 1st edit.). Umbel many-rayed; spikes compact, 

 cylindrical, compound, pale; spikelets shorl (2"-8 Long), spreading, nearly 

 terete, 7-flowered ; scalea thin, orate, acute, 7-nerved, twice the Length of the 

 obovate triangular acute nut; rachis broadly winged; culms stout, nearly 

 terete (2 -3 high), glaucous, like the broadly linear rough-edged Leaves. — 

 Wet sandy places, Punta Rassa, South Florida. — Tlie C. ligularis of the 1st 

 edition is C. brutmeus and G. purpurascens, Vahl. 



C. dissitiflorus, Torr. Umbel simple, 3- 4-rayed; spikelets scattered 



along the upper portion of the slender rays, lanceolate, compressed, acute, 



6-7-flowered; scales oblong-lanceolate, acute; nut oblong-obovate, com- 



i-triangular ; culms filiform (l°-2° high); leaves narrow-linear. — 



Mississippi, Tennessee, and westward. 



C. acuminatus, Torr. Spikelets (whitish) numerous in a compact clus- 

 ter, oblong, compressed, 20-30-flowered ; scales thin, keeled, oblong, taper- 

 ing into a spreading point, faintly 3-nerved ; nut minute, narrowly obovate ; 

 culms clustered : leaves one or two, very harrow, like the 3-leaved involucre. 

 — Low ground, Tennessee, and westward. — Culms 4' -8' high. 



C. Lancastriensis, T. C. Porter. Culms triangular (l°-2° high); 

 leaves rather broadly linear ; "umbel 6-9-rayed ; spikelets subulate, numerous 

 in an oval or globular head, soon reflexed, 3-6-flowered; scales oblong, ob- 

 tuse, twice the length of the linear-oblong nut ; rachis broadly winged. — 

 Alabama (Porter), and northward. — The spikelets are like those of C. retro- 

 Jr actus, Torr. 



C. cylindrieus. Umbel 3-6-rayed, simple, erect; heads oblong or 

 cylindrical; spikelets very numerous, lanceolate, 7-9-flowered; scales ob- 

 long, 7-9-nerved, pale, twice the length of the oblong triangular nut ; rachis 

 very slender, narrowly winged; culms (l°-2° high) triangular, smooth; 

 leaves broadly linear, as long as the culm. (Mariscus cylindrieus, Ell. ?) — 

 Sandy Keys of Caximbas Bay, South Florida. 



C. retroversus, Chapm. Umbel simple, 8-rayed ; spikes clavate-obo- 

 vate ; spikelets lanceolate, acute, reflexed, 2- 3-flowered, the lowest flower 

 fertile ; scales oblong, 7-nerved, scarcely longer than the oblong triangular 

 nut; rachis very slender, broadly winged ; culm smooth (2° high); leaves 

 linear, involucre longer than the umbel. — Robert's Key, Caximbas Bay, 

 South Florida. 



ELEOCHARIS, R. Br. 



E. compressa, Sulliv. Culms flat, from a creeping rootstock (l°-2° 

 high) ; spikes ovate-oblong, many-flowered ; scales oblong, acute, dark purple, 

 the margins white; nut obovate, compressed, the small tubercle acute; bris- 

 tles 1-4, very slender, about the length of the nut, often wanting. — Wet 

 places, mountains of Georgia, Tennessee, and northward. 



