Carets.] CLXXII/CYPERACE&. (C. B. Clarke.) 703 



flat when dry, and by the utricles having in their upper half only many larger 

 orange-rod glands. Though kept distinct by Boott and Boeckeler it should probably 

 be esteemed only a form of 0. nubigena. 



7. C muricata, Linn. Sp. PL 1382 ; rhizome short or 0, leaves not 

 incurved, spikes ovoid androgynous male at top forming an oblong or^in- 

 terrupted linear compound spike or very narrow panicle, style 2-fid, utricle 

 ovoid narrowed into a narrow conic beak, nerveless on plane face. Sckk. 

 Itiedyr. i. 20, tt. E. 22, and Ee. 91 ; Kunih Enum. ii. 384 ; J. G-ay in Ann. 

 Sc. Nat. ser. 2, x. 355 ; Beichb. Ic. FL Germ. viii. 9, t. 215 ; Boott 'Carex, iv. 

 192 ; Boerk. in Linnsea, xxxix. 86. C divulsa, Gooden. in Trans. Linn. Soc. 

 ii 160; Scfik I.e. tt. Dd. 89 and Ww. 89; Kuntli I. c. ii. 3%5 ; Reichb . 

 Fl. Ic. Fl. Germ. viii. 11, t. 220. Vignea muricata (and divulsa), Reic/ib. Fl. 

 Germ. Excurs. 57 (and 59.) 



KASHMIR ; alt. 6-9000 ft., C. B. Clarke. DISTKIB. Asia, colder N. regions. 



The Kashmir examples resemble ordinary large European typical ones. Stems 

 20 in. Leaves i-i in. broad, flat when dry. Infl. 2-3 in. by % in., consisting of 

 4-8 globose spikes, lower shortly distant. Anthers with a linear crest. 'Utricle 

 large, i in. long, yellowish, with a few irregular nerves on convex face, otherwise 

 nearly nerveless, beak bifid its length, margins closely minutely scabrid or nearly 

 smooth. Nut % utricle, subquadrate-ovoid compressed, not at all trigonous. The form 

 C. divulsa is in infl. and general aspect nearer the subjoined var. 



Var. /8 foliosa (sp.) D. Don in Trans. Linn. Soc. xiv. 327 and Prodr. 42 ; 

 inflorescence pale of many spikelets at base often subcom pound, utricle smaller. Nees 

 in Wight Contrib. 121 ; Boott Carex i. 1, t. 3 ; Kunth I. c. 384 ; Strachey Cat. PL 

 Kumaon, 73; Boeck. 1. c. 88. C. notoleia, Nees I.e.; Kunth I. c. 388. C. Walli- 

 chiana, Spreng. Syst. iii. 812 (not of Prescotf). C. muricata, var. indica, Boott 

 Caresc, iv. 193. Carex, Wall. Cat. 3387. Himalaya ; alt. 6-9000 ft., from 

 Kashmir to Upper Sikkim frequent. Sind ; Piuwill. Khasia hills; alt. 4000 ft., 

 Griffith. PULNEY and NILGHIRI HILLS; Wight. Resembles shorter examples of 

 the European C. divulsa. Boott finally reduced the whole series under C. muricata, 

 Linn. The Indian var. foliosa has the crested anthers and flat leaves of muricata, 

 and is thus easily distinguished from nubigena even when young. Some of the 

 Indian plants referred here are hardly separable from the American C. stipata, Muhl. 

 which extends to Japan and Amurland. 



8. C. Thomson!, Boott Carex,\. 1, t. 1; stem lignescent with many 

 nodes, spikes ellipsoid androgynous male at top forming a close linear 

 compound spike long overtopped by leaves, style 2-fid, utricle ovoid- 

 triangular thinly obscurely many-nerved with numerous red glands 

 throughout. Boeclc. in Linnsea, xxxix. 93. 



HIMALAYA and KHASIA, alt. 1-5000 ft., from Kumaon, Thomson, to UPPER 

 BURMA, Griffith, frequent, only on river margins. DISTRIB. Tonkin. 



Stems I ft., densely cajspitose, very rigid, black in age, and often shining, 

 perennial, not rarely rooting at top and throwing thence a cluster of stems the next 

 season. Leaves numerous, infolded when dry, narrow, far overtopping the iufl. 

 Infl,. often by 4-5 by in., dense, of 25-30 regularly placed brownish spikes. 

 (Jtricle small, brownish, plano-convex, hardly narrowed into the triangular shortly- 

 notched beak. The younger examples have been mixed with Q. nubigena, Don, 

 which has the infl. sometimes dense and regular ; but in C. nubigena the infl. is less 

 overtopped by leaves, and the utricle is more narrowed into the beak. 



9. C. fluviatilis, Boott Carex, iv. 172, t. 582 ; leaves long narrow 

 equalling the green stem, spikes ellipsoid androgynous male at top 

 numerous forming a close linear compound spike, style 2-fid, utricle ovoid 



