BKPOHT OF THE STATE BOTANIST. 95) 



Bogs shores and wet places. Very common and variable. 

 June to AugUot. 



A form sometimes occurs in which the staminate spike is fer- 

 tile at the apex. 



Var. graminis Bailey. Differs rrom the type in its much smaller 

 size, longer leaves which exceed tlie culm, its mostly erect bracts, 

 and in its smaller, usually straiglit perigynia. The beaks are 

 deeply cleft as in the type and occasionally slightly rough. 



This variety is not rare in the Adirondack region. 



Var. fertilis Pech n. var. Stems 15'-20' high, firm and erect, 

 smooth; leaves 14-"-2" wide; staminate spike invisible; pistillate 

 spikes 4--5, ovoid or short-oblong, 5"--6'' long, 3" wide, compactly 

 flowered, the upper 3 aggregated, sessile, the lowest subdistant on 

 a partly included stalk 3" -5" in length ; bracts short-sheathed, 

 divaricate and recurved, 3'-S' long, or the upper sometimes 

 setaceous ; perigynia yellowish-green with long rough beaks, a 

 little longer than the oblong, acute deep brown scale. 



Low moist ground. Dutchess county. June. 



The staminate spike is apparently almost or wholly fertile. 



124. Carex CEderi Ehrh. 



Stems 5'-20' high, slender, smooth ; leaves mostly exceeding 

 the culm, 1" wide or more, smooth, yellowish-green, fading to 

 fulvous when old ; staminate spike 3"-9" long, often androgynous, 

 sessile ; pistillate spikes 2-1, ovoid or short cylmdrical, 3"-8" long, 

 densely flowered, aggregated, or the lowest subdistant, all sessile 

 and erect, sometimes 1 or 2 proliterously branched at the base, 

 yellowish-green ; bracts leaf-like, erect, longer than the culm, or 

 the upper sometimes setaceous; perigynia obovoid, straight, 

 prominently nerved, divergent or ascending, contracted into a 

 short bifid or slightly notched smooth beak, lunger than the ovate 

 acute thin brown scalt- ; achenium triangular, obovate, apiculate, 

 sharply angled, blackish-brown. 



AVet places. Common, especially in the western part of the 

 State. July, August. 



This is easily separated from C. fiava, to which it is closely 

 allied, by its much smaller spikes and smaller perigynia with a 

 shorter, straight, smooth, slightly notched beak. In the last edi- 

 tion of the Manual it is referred to C. flava as Var. viridula 

 Bailey. 



