CYPERACEAE (SEDGE FAMILY) 



255 



552. C. rotundata. 



551. C. Giahami. 



s. N. B. and centr. Me. July-Sept. Fig. 550. — Apparently 

 hybridizes with C. vesicaria. 



180. C. Grahami Boott. Slender, 2-7 dm. high ; leaves 

 Jlat, 1.5-3 mm. wide; staminate spikes 1-3; pistillate 1-3, the 

 loicest mostly short-peduncled, slightly spreading or ascending, 

 1.2-1.8 cm. long, 0-10 mm. thick ; periciynia straw-colored, thin, 

 ovoid. 4-5 mm. long, ff-iv- nerved, with a slender 

 subentire beak, ascending, twice as long as the 

 blunt purple scale. — Margin of a pond, Mt. 

 Katahclin, Me. July, Aug. (Scotland.) Fig. 

 551. — Much of the American material previ- 

 ously referred to this species is apparently a 

 hybrid between C. saxatilis, var. miliaris and 

 forms of C. vesicaria. (C. miliaris, \'a.r. aiirea 

 Bailey; C. Baeana Britton, not Boott ; C. main- 

 ensis Porter.) 



181. C. rotundata Wahlenb. Slender, 6 dm. 

 or less high; leaves soon b( coming involute j 

 staminate spike 1 (rarely 2 or 3); pistillate 

 1 or 2, sessile, short and compact, 8-13 mm. 

 long, 6-8 mm. thick, the lower subtended by a 

 divergent bract (4-5 cm. long) ; perigynia pale or ferruginous, plump, sub- 

 globose-ovoid, few-nerved, about 3 mm. long, abruptly short-beaked, the beak 

 entire or short-toothed, one half longer than the purplish scales. — Outlet of 

 Moosehead L., Me. Aug. (Greenl., n. Eu.) Fig. 552. 



182. C. vesicaria L. Comparatively slender, 0.4-1 m. high ; the culms 

 sharply angled and generally harsh above, usually overtopped by the bracts; 

 leaves 4-7 mm. wide, loosely ascending or spreading ; staminate 

 spikes mostly 2 or 3, peduncled ; pistillate spikes 2-3, remote, 

 sessile or short-peduncled, cylindric, 2-7 cm. long. 

 1-1.5 cm. thick; perigynia slightly turgid, ovoid 

 to oblong-conic, gradually tapering to the beak, 

 when mature 7-9 mm. long, twice exceeding the 

 ovate-lancet>late acute or acnminate scales. — Mead- 

 ows and low ground, e. Que. to B. C, s. to Pa., 

 the Great Lake region, etc. June-Aug, (Eu.) 

 Fig. 553. — A very variable northern species, pass- 

 ing freely with us into the following arbitrarily 

 distinguished tendencies. Var. monile (Tuckerm.) 

 Leaves 2-5 mm. wide ; pistillate spikes as in the 

 perigynia more turgid, roundish-ovoid, about 6 mm. 

 long, rather abruptly tapering to the beak. (C. 

 monile Tuckerm.) — Nfd. to Sask,, Ky., and Mo., 

 generally common. Fig. 554. Var. jejuna Fer- 

 nald. Smaller and more slender; pistillate spikes 

 thinner, 5-8 mm. thick. — Common northw. Var. 

 DisTENTA Fries. Slender ; pistillate spikes 1 or 2, 

 shoi't and thick, 1-2.5 cm. long, 1-1.5 cm. thick; 

 perigynia subglobose or ovoid, abruptly beaked. — Local, Nfd. and 

 Que! to Me. and Vt. A^ar. RaeXxa (Boott) Fernald. Very slen- 

 der ; leaves 2 mm. wide, tending to become involute at tip; pis- 

 tillate spikes slender, 4-8 mm. thick; perigynia scarcely inflated, 

 narrow and elongate. — Local, Que. to Athabasca, s. to Me. 

 Fig. 555. 



183. C. rostrata Stokes. Culm 0.3-1 m. high, rather stout, 

 thickish and spongy at base, generally smooth and bluntly angled 

 above ; leaves elongated, flat, usually equaling or exceeding the 

 culms, pale green or glaucous, 0.2-1 cm. wide, piomui u,ly nodulose, espe- 

 cially after drying; staminate inflorescence peduncled, of 2-4 distinct spikes, 

 pistillate spikes mostly 2-4, sessile or the lower peduncled, cylindric, dense, 



554 C. ves., 

 V. monile. 



Fernald= 

 species 



553. C. vesicaria. 



555. C. ves. 

 V. I^aeana. 



