CYPERACEAE (SEDGE FAMILY) 



2'Zl 



cephaloidea. 



401. C. sparganioides. 



achene obovate. 



(5-9 mm.) and flat, their sheaths conspicuously clothing the 

 base of the culm; spikes 6-12, the 2 or o upper ones con- 

 tiguous, the remainder entirely separate, very green, shorl 

 cylindric, the lowest often compound, all truncate at top: 

 perigynium ovate, 3-4 mm. long, rough on the short beak, 

 often obscurely nerved on the outer face, considerably longer 

 than the whiiish sharp-pointed scale. — Rich woods, N. H. to 

 Ont., Mo., and Va. June, July. Fig. 401. 



48. C. cephaloidea Dewey. Lax, very green, 3-0 dm. 

 high; leaves broad (5-8 mm.) and thin, 

 shorter than the long soft culm ; head 1.8-3.8 

 cm. long, leather dense ; perigynium narrowly 

 ovate, 3. .^-4.5 mm. long, pale green, nerve- 

 less, with long rough beak, spreading. — 

 Rich woods and thickets, local, N. B. to 

 Pa., Wise, and Ont. May-July. Fig. 402. 



49. C. alopecoidea Tuckerm. Stout but 

 rather soft, 4-U dm. high ; cidm rather sharp, 

 thick and soft in texture ; leaves 4-8 mm. 

 wide, about the length of the culm, very 



green ; head 2-6 cm. long, straw-color or tawny, occasionally a little compound, 

 the spikes many and compactly or somewhat loosely disposed or the lowest 

 often separate and all mostly short-cylindric ; perigynium 3-4 

 mm. long, 1.5-2 mm. broad, tapering into a rough beak, very 

 prominently stipitate, with a few brawn nerves on the outer 

 face, ascending, about equaling or a little exceeding the scale ; 

 1 mm. broad, style not thickened at base. — 

 Open swales and low thickets. Me. to Ont. 

 and 111. ; local. June, July. Fig. 403. 



50. C. gravida Bailey. Low, the culm 

 thin and sharply angled. 2-5 dm. high; leaves 

 rather tirm, shorter than the culm ; head 2-4 

 cm. long, greenish to pale brown, short-cylindric, the lowest 

 spikes rarely distinct; spikes globular ; perigyninm 3-4.5 mm. 

 long, 2-3 7nm. broad, sessile, plump and somewhat polished at 

 maturity, prominently spreading ; achene sub- 

 orbicular, 1.5-2 mw. broad, style bulbous- 

 thickened at base. — Ind. and Wise, to Neb., 

 and southw. Fig. 404. Var. laxif6lia 

 Bailey. Much larger, 6-12 dm. high ; leaves 

 broader and lax ; head large and dense, 



ovoid or thick-cylindric, scarcely interrupted. — Ky. to S. Dak. 

 and Mo. 



51. C. vulpinoidea Michx. Mostly rather 

 stiff, 0.3-1 m. high ; culm very rough, at least 

 above; leaves 2-5 mm. broad, mostly flat and 

 longer than the culm; head 2-15 cm. long, 

 usually much interrupted or dense or somewhat 

 compound, varying from dull brown to almost 

 greon at maturity, commonly provided with 

 many very setaceous short bracts ; spikes very 

 numerous, ascending and densely flowered ; peri- 

 gynium ovate or lance-ovate, mostly ascending, 

 1.7-3 cm. long ; scales mostly long-awned. — Low places, variable. 

 June-Aug. Fig. 405. 



52. C. setacea Dewey. Resembling the last ; culms stiff, 

 0.4-1 m. high, much exceeding the rather broad (2-7 mm.) stiffish 

 leaves; head usually simple, 3.5-9 cm. long, of approximate or 

 remote spikes; perigynia lanceolate to lance-ovate, tapering 

 gradually to the serrulate beak, usually dull brown or drab in 



alopecoidea. 



40-1. C. gravida. 



405. C. vulpinoidt 



40€. C. setacea. 



