

(SEDGE FAMILY.) 497 



a narrowed base, beaked with a slender conical-awl-shaped distinct tubercle, 

 whicli nearly equals the 6 bristles. (E. rcclinata, Kunth!) Wet slopes ; com- 

 mon northward, and west to Illinois. 



-M- -t-v Bristles 2-4, shorter than the achenium and fragile, or none. 



9. E. Si'BlHiS, Schultcs. Culms almost capillary, erect, sharply 4-angular 

 (1 high), the sides concave; spike elliptical, acutish, 20 - 30-fiowered (3" long) ; 

 scales ovate, obtuse, chestnut-purple with a broad scarious margin and green keel ; 

 urhenium obovate, roughened with close and fine projecting dots, crowned with a small 

 depressed tubercle; bristles 2-3, half the length of the achenium, or wanting. 

 (E. elliptica, Kunth !) Wet meadows and bogs; common. 



10. E. COfiilprcssa, Sullivant. Culms fiat, strongly striate, slender, 

 erect (l hiy:h) ; spike ovate-oblong, 20 - 30-fiowcred (4" long); scales lanceolate- 

 ovate, acute, dark purple with broad white pellucid margins and summit; the style 

 2-cleft; achenium obovate-pcar-shaped, obtusely 3-angled, obscurely wrinkled-pitted, 

 crowned ivith a small globular-conical tubercle; bristles none (rarely a single rudi- 

 ment). Wet places, N. New York, Ohio, and Illinois. Culms tufted on run- 

 ning rootstocks, I 1 ' broad, strikingly flat, spirally twisted in drying. 



11. E. fllClailOCarpa, Torr. Culms flattened, grooved, wiry, erect (9' 

 -18' high) ; spike cylindrical-ovoid or oblong, thick, obtuse, densely many-flowered 

 (3" -6" long) ; scales roundish-ovate, very obtuse, brownish with broad scarious 

 margins ; achenium smooth, obovate-top-shaped, obtusely triangular, the broad summit 

 entirely covered like a lid by the Jlatly depressed tubercle, which is raised in the cen 

 tre into a short abrupt triangular point ; bristles 3 or 4, shorter than the (soon 

 blackish) achenium, fragile, often obsolete. Wet sand, Plymouth, Massachu- 

 setts, to Virginia, and southward along the coast. Scales closely many-ranked, 

 as in the first division of 2. 



12. E. triCOStata, Torr. Culms fiattish, thread-like (1- 2 high) ; spike 

 cylindrical-oblong, densely many-flowered (6"-9" long), thickish; scales ovate, 

 very obtuse, rusty brown, with broad scarious margins ; achenium obovate, with 3 

 prominent thickened angles, minutely rough-wrinkled, crowned with a short-conical 

 acute tubercle; bristles none. Quaker Bridge, New Jersey (Knitskern], and 

 southward. 



*- -i- Spike lance-linear, scarcely broader than the sharply triangular culm: scales 

 Jew-ranked, greenish, finely several-nerved on the keeled back. 



13. E. Koll>ilisii, Oakes. Flower-bearing culms exactly triangular, rather 

 stout, erect (8' -2 high), also producing tufts of capillary abortive stems, like 

 fine leaves, which float in the water ; sheath obliquely truncate ; scales of the 

 pointed spike 3 - 9, convolute-clasping, lanceolate, obtuse, with scarious mar- 

 gins ; achenium oblong-obovate, 3-angular, minutely reticulated, about half the 

 length of the 6 downwardly-barbed strong bristles, tipped with a flattened awl- 

 shaped tubercle. Shallow water, from Pondicherry Pond, New Hampshire 

 (Rd>bin$),to New Jersey, C. E. Smith, &c. Spike varying from ' to 1' long, by 

 1" wide ; the long scales being rather remote and sheath-like. 



3. CILETOCYPERUS, Nees. Scales of the compressed few - several- fioieered 

 spike membranaceous, 2 - 3-ranked : bristles 3 - 6, fragile or fugacious : style 3-cleft : 

 achenium triangular or somewhat terete : cul/ns small and capillary. 

 42* 



