578 CYPERACE^. (sedge FAMILY.) 



glaucous, sometimes hairy; spikelets ovate, acute (3" long) ; stamen 1 ; achem 

 conspicuousi I) 6- 8-ribhed on each side, and whhjiner cross-Lines. — Low ground, 

 Penn. to Fla., west to 111. and La. July - Sept. 



* * Style 3-cleft and achene triangular ; tubercle soon deciduous ; spikelets 



smaller and fewer-Jlowered. 



3. F. autumn^lis, Roem. & Schult. (PI. 3, fig. 6-9.) Annual (3- 

 16' high), in tufts; culms flat, slender, diffuse or erect; leaves flat, acute; 

 umbel compound; spikelets oblong, acute (1-2" long), single or 2-3 in a 

 cluster; sgales ovate-lanceolate, mucronate; stamens 1-3. — Low grounds, 

 Maine to Fla., west to 111. and La. 



* * * Style Z-cleft, filiform and not ciliate; achene acutely triangular ; tubercle 



more or less persistent. 



4. F. capillaris, Gray. Low annual, densely tufted (3-9' high) ; culm 



and leaves nearly capillary, the latter short ; umbel compound or panicled ; 



spikelets (2" long) ovoid-oblong; stamens 2; achene minutely wrinkled, very 



obtuse. — Sandy fields, N. Eng. to Fla., west to Minn., Tex., and the Pacific. 



F. VAhlii, Link (F. congesta, Torr.), a diminutive southern species, with 

 long filiform leaves, sessile capitate spikelets, narrow acuminate scales, and 

 the style 2-cleft and not ciliate, has been found in ballast-sand along the north- 

 ern coast. 



8. SCIRPUS, Tourn. Bulrush or Club-Rush. (PI. 3.) 



Spikelets several - many-flowered, solitary or in a terminal cluster which is 

 subtended by a 1 -several-leaved involucre (this when simple often appearing 

 like a continuation of the culm), terete, the scales being regularly imbricated 

 all round in many or several ranks, or rarely somewhat compressed and the 

 fewer scales inclining to be 2-ranked. Flowers to all the scales, or to all but 

 one or two of the lowest, all perfect. Perianth of 3 - 6 mostly retrorsely barbed 

 or ciliate bristles (not elongated), or sometimes Avanting. Stamens mostly 3. 

 Style 2 -3-cleft, simple, not bulbous at base, wholly deciduous, or sometimes 

 leaving a tip or point to the lenticular or triangular achene. — Culms sheathed 

 at base; the sheaths usually leaf-bearing. ^Mostly perennials; flowering in 

 summer. (The Latin name of the Bulrush.) 



* Spikelets solitary ,few-fioicered , small, often flattish ; achene triangular, smooth 

 -f- Involucre a short aivl-shaped bract; culms tufted {3 -\2' high), filiform. 



1. S. CSBSpitoSUS, L. Culms terete, wiry, densely sheathed at base, in 

 compact turfy tufts; the upper sheath bearing a very i/ior/ awl-shaped lea f; 

 spikelet ovoid, rusty-color ; involucral bract a rigid-pointed scale, resembling 

 the lowest proper scale of the spikelet and scarcely surpassing it ; bristles 6, 

 smooth, longer than the abruptly short-pointed achene. — Coast of Maine, al- 

 pine summits of N. Eng., swamps of northern N. Y., N. 111., Minn., and north- 

 ward; also on Roan Mt., N. C. (Eu.) 



2. S. Clintonii, Gray. Culms acutely triangular, almost bristle-like . 

 sheaths at the base bearing a very slender almost bristle-shaped leaf shortei 

 (usually very much shorter) than the culm ; involucral bract awl-shaped, mostly 

 shorter than the chestnut-colored ovate spikelet, which has pointless scales ; 

 otherwise as the next. — Rather dry plains, N. Y. June. 



