574 CYPERACE^E. (SEDGE FAMILY.) 



* * Spikelet cylindrical, many-flowered, 1-2' long ; scales in several ranKS, firm- 



coriaceous with scarious margin, pale, nerveless or family striate ; culms large 

 and stout (2-4 high) ; basal sheaths often leaf-bearing. 



2. E. equisetoides, Torr. Culm terete, knotted as if jointed by many 

 cross-partitions; ac/tene smooth (the minute reticulation transversely linear- 

 rectangular), with a conical-beaked tubercle. Shallow water, R. I. to Fla., 

 west to Mich, and Tex. 



3. E. quadrangulata, R. Br. (PI. 3, fig. 6-9.) Culm continuous and 

 sharply 4-anyled ; achene. finely reticulated, with a conical flattened distinct tu- 

 bercle. Shallow water, central N. Y. to Mich., and southward ; rare. 



2. Spikelet terete and turgid-ovate, much thicker than the very slender culm ; 

 scales thin-coriaceous or firm-membranaceous, persistent, ovate; style 3-cleft ; 

 bristles stout, barbed downward (or sometimes upward), as long as the striate 

 and pitted-reticu/ated triangular achene and its tubercle; culms tufted from 

 fibrous roots, 1-2 high. 



4. E. tuberculosa, R. Br. (PI. 3, fig. 10.) Culms flatfish, striate; spike- 

 let 3-6" long, many-flowered; tubercle ftattish-cap-shaped, (.is large as the bodt/ 

 of the achene. Wet sandy soil, from Mass, along the coast to Fla. 



5. E. tortilis, Schult. Culms sharply triangular, capillary, twisting when 

 dry; spikelet 2-3" long, few-flowered; conical-beaked tubercle much smaller 

 than the achene. (E. simplex, Torr.) Eastern shore of Md. to Fla. 



3. Spikelets terete, much thicker than the culm, many-flowered ; scales imbri- 

 cated in many or more than 3 ranks, thin-membranaceous or scar tons, with a 

 thicker midrib, usually browmsn ffr purplish, sometimes deciduous. 



# Style 2-cle/l (often 3-c/eft in n. 7 and 10) and the, smooth achene lenticular: 



culms slender or thread-form, terete or compressed. 



-t- Annuals ; culms tufted, from fibrous roots. 



6. E. capitata, R. Br. Culms terete, J-8' high or more; spikelets ovate 

 to oblong (1-3" long), obtuse, 1 5 - 40-flowered ; scales thickish, round-ovate, ob- 

 tuse, brown or brownish with green keel and paler margins ; stamens 2 ; achene 

 obovate, black, about equalling the 6-8 bristles, tipped with a flattened or sau- 

 cer-shaped tubercle. (E. dispar, E. J. Hill.) In sand or gravel near sloughs, 

 Md. (Canby) to Fla. and Tex. ; N. Ind. (Hill). (S. Am., etc.) 



7. E. OVata, R. Br. Culms nearly terete, 8- 14' high; spikelet globose- 

 ovoid to ovate-oblong, obtuse, 1 - 6" long (dull brown) ; scales very obtuse, dense/// 

 crowded in many ranks ; style 3- (rarely 2-) cleft ; achene obovate with narrow 

 base, pale-brownish, shining, shorter than the 6-8 bristles, broader than the 

 short-deltoid, acute and flattened tubercle. (E. obtusa, Schult.) Muddy places, 

 N. Brunswick to Minn., south and westward. Variable as to the length of its 

 bristles. A low form, with smaller and more narrowly obovate achenes, and 

 the bristles very short or none, is E. diandra, Wright. A dwarf form occurs 

 with very small and few-flowered heads. (Eu.) 



8. E. Engelmanni, Steud. Like the last; spikelets usually narrowly 

 cylindrical and acute or acutish, 2 - 8" long ; achene broad and truncate, the 

 tubercle covering the summit ; bristles not exceeding the achene. (E. obtusa, 

 var. detonsa, Gray.) Mass, to Peun. and Mo. 



