CYPERACE^. (sedge FAMILY.) 595 



beak, widely spreading or reflcxed at maturity. — Wet meadows, especially 

 northward. — Wiiole plant of a yellowish hue, 6'- 15' high, with spikes about 

 6" in length. (Eu.) 



115. C. OEdei'i, Ehrh. Fi^nile spikes obloiif/-ocoid, closely ai/fjregated, or t\vi 

 lowest rather remote, on very ^hort stalks, densely flowered, sometimes stami- 

 natc at the ape.\ ; leaves and biacts luirrvw, r/qid/j/ ei-ect ; pcii(/ijiua oroid, with a 

 short and rather abrupt ininutdij notched beak, scarcely recurved at maturity. (C. 

 viridula, Miclix., not of Schw. ^- Torr. C. irregularis, Schiv.) — Wet rocks and 

 hluffs, coast of New England to Illinois, Lake Superior, and northward. — 

 Resembles the last; but the fertile spikes and perigynia are much smaller, and 

 the beak more abrupt, shorter, and straight. (Eu.) 



§ 10. Perigynia slightly inflated, ovoid or obtusely 3-angled, with an abrupt 

 straight beak, nerved, densely pubescent or rough-puberulent, the pubescence 

 nearly concealing the nerves, except in No. 119 : bracts leaf-like, with short 

 sheaths : scales dark-purple or brown. 



* Perigynia. densely pubescent of a thick or somewhat leathery texture, ovoid, with 2 



short and diverging membranaceous teeth : bracts much exceeding the nearly smooth 

 culm : staminatc spikes 2 or 3, the uppermost stalked, the lower short and 

 sessilQ : fertile spikes 1-4, usually 2, erect, remote, sessile or on very short 

 stalks. — Laxugin6s.e. 



116. C. filifbrmis, L. Fertile spikes oblong or ovoid; perigynia very 

 short-beaked and with 2 sharp teeth ; leaves and bracts narrow and involute; culm 

 very slender (l^°-3° high). — Peat-bogs, New England to Penn., Wisconsin, 

 and northward. (En.) 



117. C. lanugindsa, Michx. Fertile spikes oblong or cylindrical ; peri- 

 gynia more hispidly pubescent; leaves and brads flat, broader and shorter; culm 

 stouter (l°-2° high) ; staminate spikes usually shorter. (C. pellita, Aluhl.) — 

 Swamps and wet meadows. New England to Kentucky and northward. 



* * Ferigyn'ia thin, downy like the last or roughly granulate, or even smooth, ovoid, 



the beak terminating in a thin and scariom oblique orifice, either entire or slightly 

 notched; bracts rigidly erect, shorter than the sharply triangular roug4a 

 culm. — Sc.\Ri6sjE. 



118. C. vestita, Willd. Sterile .spikes 1-2, the uppermost cylindrical, 

 short-stalked; fertile 1-2, approximate, sessile, ovoid or oblong, sometimes 

 staminate at the apex ; perigi/nia densely pubescent, with a short thick beak, a little 

 longer than the ovate pointed scale; leaves flat, shorter than the stout and rigid 

 culm. — Sandy soils, growing in tufts. New England to Penn. and southward. 

 — Resembling the last in external appearance, but readily distinguished by the 

 membranaceous beak of the fruit, which is reddish at the base and white and 

 transparent at the oritice ; and the style is twisted within the perigyninm, 



119. C. polymorpha, Muhl. (in part.) Sterile spikes 1-4, the upper- 

 most on a long stalk ; the lower short, often with a few fertile flowers at the 

 base ; fi-rfik spike solitary or rarely 2, remote, cylindrical, sometimes staminate at 

 the ai)ex, erect, on partly exserted stalks; perigynia fl^w- (5 -10-) nerved, very 

 minutely roughened with granular dots^ or smooth, abruptly contracted into a, slender 



