562 CTPERACE^. (sedge family.) 



closely capitate, ovoid, obtuse, overtopped by the short involucral leaf; scales 

 orbicular, smooth, the inconspicuous mucronate point shorter than the scarious 

 apex ; anthers with a very short and blunt minvtdy bearded tip ; style 2-cleft ; bristles 

 6, scarcely equalling the obovate plano-convex and mucronate achenium. — 

 Salt marshes, Martha's Vineyard (Oakes), and Rhode Island {Olney), to Dela- 

 ware, and common southward. — Cross-section of the stem strongly 3-rayed, 

 with the sides parallel. — Much nearer than the last to the European S. 

 TKiQci;TEE, which has similar anthers, and an abbreviated or almost abortive 

 leaf; but its culm is wingless, and the cluster of spikes compound, some of 

 them umbellate-stalked. 



8. S. Tdrreyi, Olney. Rootstocks slender if any (so that the plant is 

 readily pulled up from the mud ) ; culm 3-angled, with concave sides, rather slen- 

 der (2°-4° high), leafy at the base; leaver 2 or 3, more than half the length of the 

 cM?m, triangular-channelled, slender; spikes 1-4, oblong or spindle-shaped, acute, 

 distinct, pale chestnut-color, long overtopped by the slender erect involucral leaf;; 

 scales ovate, smooth, entire, barely mucronate ; style Z-cleft ; bristles longer than 

 the unequally triangular obovate very smooth and long-pointed achenium. (S. mucro-, 

 natus, Pursh?, Torr. Fl. N. Y.) — Borders of ponds, both brackish and fresh, 

 New England to Penn. and Michigan. 



■*- -1- Culm triangular, tall and stout, from slender running rootstocks : spikes many' 

 flowered loosely umbellate or corymbed, involuceUate-bracted. 



9. S. C&nbyi, Gray. Culm (3° - 5° high) 3-angled, usually sharply so 

 above, obtusely below, the sheath at the base extended into a long and slender 

 triangular and channelled leaf; the involucral leaf similar, continuing the 

 culm; spikes oblong (4^-6' long), single or sometimes proliferously 2 or 3 

 together, nodding on the apex of the 5 - 9 long filiform and flattened peduncles 

 or rays of the dichotomous umbel-like corymb, or the central one nearly sessile ; 

 scales of the spike loosely imbricated, oblong-ovate, acute, pale, thin and scari- 

 ous, with a greenish nerved back ; bristles of the perianth 6, firm, furnished 

 above with spreading hairs rather than barbs, equalling the slender abrupt beak 

 of the obovate-triangular shining achenium. — In u. mill-pond, near Salisbury, 

 Maryland, A. Commons, W. M. Canby. — A remarkable species: leaf 2° -4° 

 long: involucral leaf 4' -8' long: rays or peduncles lj'-3' long, c.ich sub- 

 tended by a single involucellate leaf or bract, the lowest like that of the involucre 

 but short, the uppermost reduced to scale-like bracts. Achenium (Ij", and its 

 beak ^" long. 



M- -t- -t-' Culm terete, very tall and stout, fr&m a deep running rootstoch, naked; the 

 sheaths at the base bearing a short and imperfect leaf or none : spikes numerous 

 and clustered in a one-sided compound umbel-like panicle, the principal rays of 

 which mostly surpass the involucral leaf: involucellate bracts small, scale-like and 

 msty-scarknts : scales oftlie spike rusty or chestnut-brown, scarious, with a salient 

 midrib extended into a mucronate point. 



10. S. v^Iidus, "Vahl. (Great Bulrush.) Culm 3° -9° high, ^'-1' 

 thick at base; spikes ovate-oblong (3" -4" long); scales mostly a little downy 

 on the back and ciliate ; style 2-cIeft ; achenium pale and dull, obovate with a nar- 

 rowed base, plano-convex, mucronate-pointed, usually overtopped by the i- 6 slender 



