Carez..] CXLIIT. CYPERACHA, 439 
C. canescens, Linn.; Boott, Ill. Car. iv. 154, t. 496.—Stems 
4 tà 9 in.high. Leaves often as sees usually broader and thinner than 
in C. inversa. Spikelets 3 to 8, sessile, either m or erowded in a 
terminal spike, androgynous, ovate, 2 to 3 lines long. Subtending 
with its own small secondary glume. emales rather numerous. 
Utricle about 1 line long, ovate, compressed, contracted into a te 
Short beak. Bristle within the dtrielé sometimes long and rigid o 
dilated and glume-like, but often small or obsolete. Style-branci es 2. 
ins risen —Bockel. in Linnea, xxxix. 122; F. Muell. Fragm. 
255. 
votes Mount Baw-Baw and Munyang Mountains, F. Mueller. 
ci cue and Alpine Europe, Asia and America, and in n extra-tropical 
South rule 
ute angles or narrow wings, and a ee straight slender beak. 
branches 2.—F. Muell. Fragm. viii. 252 ; C. stellulata, Gooden. ; Kunth, 
Enum. ii. 309; Reichb. Ie. Fl. Germ. t. 214. 
, Victoria. Munyang Mountains, F. ae. 
Extends over the temperate and cooler regions of the northern hemisphere. 
7 ypandra, F. Muell. Fragm. viii, 259.—Stems in the speci- 
mens seen edi in. high. Leaves as long or rather longer, about 
l line broad, Spikelets 4 sessile in a terminal spike, the lowest scarcely 
Peduneulate, the terminal one at least androgynous, oblong, _ to 
lines long. Lowest bract leaflike in one specimen, very short in the 
but qu uite dito Style-bran mabe 2. 
ia, Munyang Mountains, at an elevation of 6000 to 7000 ft., F, Mueller. 
Of this I have pe op: seen two speci It is certainly as observed by F. Mueller, 
Very near the northern €. bi i ies has the lower dis- 
tingga the no C. bicolor, AIL, but that per — vécu 
