532 CYPERACE^E. (SEDGE FAMILY.) 



Wood Creek, New York. Also in Ohio and S. Illinois. -Culm robust 



3 high : perigynia |' in length. Flowers in July, a month later than the last. 



* * Bracts conspicuously sheathing. 



117. C. follicillata, L. Staminate spike small, short-stalked, or often 

 sessile ; fertile spikes 3-4, ovoid, very remote, the lower on exserted peduncles; 

 periyynia erect-spreading, tapering from an oblong base, rather exceeding the ovatr. 

 white I mg-awned scale. (C. xanthophysa, Wahl.) Teat-bogs, New England to 

 Penn., and northward, and sparingly southward. A robust plant, -2 -4 high, 

 of yellowish appearance, with long foliaceous bracts, and leaves $' wide. 



118. C. rostrala, Michx. Staminate spike small, nearly sessile ; fertile 

 tpikes 1-3, commonly 2, roundish-ovoid, the lower rather distant on a short ex- 

 serted peduncle; perigynia erect or somewhat spreading, tapering from an oblong 

 slightly inflated base into a long slender beak twice the length of the blunt light- 

 brown scale. (C. xanthophysa, var. nana and minor, Dew.) Cold bogs, moun- 

 tains of N. New York, New Hampshire, and northward. Resembles the last; 

 but smaller in all its parts, rigidly erect, and with narrow leaves. 



119. C. Sllblllata, Michx. Fertile spikes 3-5, very remote, on included 

 peduncles loosely few- (4 - 8-) flowered, commonly with a few staminate flowers at 

 the apex ; periyynia awl-shaped, strongly rejlexed at maturity ; the orifice of the 

 long slender beak furnished with 2 sharp and rigidly dtflexed teeth. (C. Collinsii, 

 Nutt. C. Michauxii, Dew.) Cedar swamps, New Jersey to Rhode Island 

 (Olney) near the coast, and far northward : rare. 



120. C. Illpulilia, Muhl. Fertile spikes 2 - 4, d)long-ovoid, erect, the up- 

 per approximate, the lower on more or less exserted stalks ; perigynia erect, ta]>sr~ 

 ing from the ovoid very inflated base into a conical slightly serrulate beak, much 

 longer than the lanceolate awned scale. Var. pOLYSxAciiYA, Schw. & Torr. 

 (C. lupinilbrmis, Sartwell), has 4-5 longer cylindrical fertile spikes, the lowest 

 remote on a long peduncle ; and the perigynia more distinctly serrulate on the 

 angles of the beak. Swamps and wet meadows ; common. A coarse robust 

 species, with very thick spikes 2' -3' in length; the leaves and long leafy bracts 

 3-4 lines wide, very rough on the margin. 



13. Perigynia much injlated, obovoid or obconic, few-nerved, smooth, with an ex- 

 tremely abrupt and very long slightly roughened beak, terminated by 2 distinct 

 rather short membranaceous teeth, tawny-brown or straw-colored at maturity, 

 spreading horizontally, or the lower deflcxed : bracts leaf-like, much exceed 

 ing the culm. So.UAUR6s.3E. 



* Spikes 1-3, mostly solitary, very rarely 4-5, all of them principally pistillate, 

 with more or less staminate flowers at the base : sheaths of the upper bracts 

 obsolete. 



121. C. SQliarrosa, L. Fertile spikes owid or oblong, obtuse and very 

 thick, rigidly erect, on short stalks ; perigynia longer than the lanceolate pointed 

 scales, which ;irc nearly* concealed by* the densely-crowded liases of the mature 

 fruit. (C typhina, J//r/*.r.) Low meadows and copses, S. New England to 

 Illinois and southward. Remarkable for its densely-flowered, sbort and thick 

 spikes, about 1' long, to which the spreading beaks of the perigynia gi\e a bris- 

 tly appearam e. 



