(SEDGE FAMILY.) 621 



Var. minor, Boott. Much smaller, 6-10' high, the leaves very narrow; 

 head very small and darker brown ; spikes very small (2 - 4" long). Rocky and 

 sterile places, northward ; frequent. 



** ** 41. Perigynium ovate or broader, thickened in the middle, wing-margined 



(in n. 129 marginless). 

 = Head silvery -brown, silvery -green, or silvery-whitish. 



129. C. adtista, Boott. Very stiff and stout, 1-J- - 2 high, in dense tufts ; 

 head very heavy, erect, varying from globular to oblong, silvery-brown ; spikes 

 5-10, globular and heavy, all aggregated or sometimes distinct, the lowest 1 



'or 2 subtended by a short and very broad-based, nerved and pointed bract ; 

 perigynium broadly ovate, wingless or very nearly so, plump, shining, nerved 

 on the outer face but nerveless on the inner, filled by the large achene ; scale 

 acute, about the length of the perigynium. (C. pinguis, Bailey.) Dry and 

 mostly hard soils, Mt. Desert, Maine (Greenleaf), and northward, and Craw- 

 ford Co., Mich. (Bailey), to N. Minn., and far northwestward ; local. 



130. C. foenea, Willd. Slender, erect or the top of the culm flexuose, 

 1-2 high ; head long and weak, often nodding ; spikes 5-8, small, nearly 

 globular and much contracted below, silvery-green, alternately disposed ; peri- 

 gynium varying from ovate to long-ovate, very thin, much longer than the 

 small achene, prominently rough-margined, strongly many-nerved on both 

 faces, especially on the small inner face ; bracts entirely wanting or inconspic- 

 uous. (C. adusta, last ed.) Dryish copses, N. Eng. to Penn. and Minn. ; not 

 common. Var. PERPLEXA, Bailey. Mostly taller and stouter ; spikes larger 

 and less attenuated or even truncate below, approximate or even aggregated, 

 the head erect or nearly so and the lowest bract occasionally prominent ; peri- 

 gyiiium thicker and firmer in texture. N. Eng. to Minn. ; infrequent. 



131 . C. silicea, Olney. Stiff, 1-2 high, in clumps ; leaves very narrow, 

 becoming involute, not exceeding the culm; head 1 -3' long, usually flexuose 

 or nodding above the middle at maturity ; spikes 5-8, silvery-white or silvery- 

 tawny at full maturity, all more or less separated, ovate, conspicuously con- 

 tracted below and cone-shaped above, erect on the culm; perigynium very 

 broad-ovate and very thin, obscurely nerved, appressed, about as long as the 

 acute colorless scale. (C. fo3nea, var. sabulonum, last ed. ; C. straminea, var. 

 moniliformis, Tuckerm.) Sands of the sea-shore, Maine to N. J.; frequent. 



= = Head dull brown or green (usually somewhat silvery in var. foenea ofn. 132). 



132. C. Straminea, Willd. Very slender, erect, but the top of the culm 

 often flexuose, 1-3 high ; leaves narrow and long-pointed, stiff, shorter than 

 the culm ; spikes 3-8, tawny, very small (2 -3" broad), globular or sometimes 

 a little tapering below from the presence of many staminate flowers, usually all 

 entirely distinct on the very slender, often zigzag or flexuose rhachis ; bracts 

 none, or only the lowest conspicuous ; perigynium small and ovate, nerved on 

 both faces but never unusually prominently nerved on the inner face (as is the 

 perigynium of n. 130), the points spreading and rather conspicuous; scale 

 acute, about the length of the perigynium. (C. straminea, var. tenera, last 

 ed.) Dryish copses and fields ; common. Immensely variable. 



Var. mirabilis, Tuckerm. Culm long and mostly weak, often 4 high, 

 much longer than *he loose leaves; spikes 4-8, larger, usually all contiguous 



