CYPERACE^. (sedge FAMILY.) 565 



§ 2. TEICH6PH0RUM, Richard. Bristles capillary, naked, not bailed, elm- 

 gatincj, hecomim/ tortuous and entangled, much longer than the triangular arheniunt, 

 when old mostlij projecting beyond the rusti/-colored scales : cuhn, leaves, ^-c. as in 

 the preceding subdivision; umbel -like cymose panicle decom/iound. 



21. S. line^tUS, Michx. Culm triangular, leafy (l°-3° high); leaves 

 linear, flat, rather broad, ruugh on the margins ; umbels terminal and some- 

 times axillary, loose, drooping, the terminal with a 1-3-leaved involucre much 

 shorter than the long and slender rays ; spikes oblong, becoming cylindrical 

 (2" -4" long), on thread-like drooping pedicels ; bristles at maturity scarcely 

 exceeding the ovate green-keeled and pointed scales; achenium sharp-pointed. 



— Low grounds, W. New England to Wisconsin, and common southward. 



22, S. Eriophorum, Michx. (Wool-Grass.) Culm nearly terete, very 

 leafy (2° -5° high) ; leaves narrowly linear, long, rigid, those of the involucre 

 3-5, longer than the decompound cymose-panicled umbel, the rays at length droop- 

 ing; spikes exceedingly numerous, ovate, clustered, or the lateral ones pedi- 

 celled, woolly at maturity (l^"-3" long) ; the rusty-colored bristles much longer 

 than the pointless scales; achenium short-pointed. (EricJphorum cyperinum, L.) 



— Var. CYPERiNUS (S. cyperinus, Kunth) is the form with nearly all tlie spikes 

 conglomerate in small heads. — Var. laxus (S. Eriophorum, A'«''<'^) has the 

 heads scattered, the lateral ones long-pedicelled. Various intermediate forms 

 occur ; and the umbel varies greatly m size. — Wet meadows and swamps : 

 common northward and southward. 



9. ERIOPHORUM, L. Cotton Grass. (PI. 3.) 



Spikes, scales, achenium, &c. as in Scirpus. Bristles of the perianth of 

 numerous (in one species few) flat and delicate capillary bristles, which lengtiien 

 greatly after flowering, much exceeding the scales, and forming of the capitate 

 spike a (white or reddish) conspicuous cotton-like tuft in fruit. Stamens 1 -3. 

 Style 3-cleft. Perennials. (Name composed of tpiov, wool or cotton, and (l>opa, 

 hearing.) 



* Bristles of the flower only 6, crisped, ivhite ; spike single : small, involucre none. 



1. E. alpinum, L. Culms slender, many in a row from a running root- 

 stock 6' -10' high), scabrous, naked; sheaths at the base awl-tipped. — Cold 

 bogs, New England to Penn., Wisconsin, and northward. June. (Eu.) 



* * Bristles very numerous, not crisped, forming dense cottony heads in fruit. 

 ■*- Culm bearing a single spike : involucre none. 



2. E. vaginatum, L. Culms in close tufts (1° high), leafy only at the 

 base, above with 2 inflated leafless sheaths ; root-leaves long and thread-form, 

 triangular-ciiannelled ; scales of the ovate spike long-pointed, lead-color at 

 maturity. — Cold and high peat-bogs, New England to mountains of Penn. 

 (Prof. T. Green), Wisconsin, and northward; rare. May, June. (Eu.) 



(E. RUSstoLUM, Fries, with copper-colored wool, found in New Brunswick 

 by Bev. J. Fowler, may be expected in N. E. Maine.) 



•<- -1- Cidin leafy, bearing several umbellate-clustered heads, invohicrate. 



3. E. Virginieum, L. Culm rigid (2°-4°high); leaves very narrowly 

 linear, elongated, flat; spikes nearly sessile, crowded in a dense cluster or head; 



