CTPERACE^. (sedge FAMILY.) 579 



*+ •"■ Spikes androgynous. 



36. C. stellul&ta, L. Spikes 3-5, the uppermost much contracted at the 

 base by the numerous staminate flowers; perigynia ovate or slightly heart- 

 shaped at the base, which has thickish or obtuse margins, the apex more mi- 

 nutely toothed ; scales rather blunt and considerably shorter ; leaves flatter and 

 pale : otherwise nearly as in the last. — Lake Superior and northward. (Eu.) 



Var. scirpoides. Culms slender and weak (9'-20'); leaves very narrow; 

 spikes contiguous, smaller ; perigynia with a rounded or truncate base, plano- 

 convex, almost twice the length of the obtuse scale. (C. scirpoides, Schk.) — 

 Wet places : common. 



Var. angust^ta, is remarkable for the narrow lanceolate perigynia more 

 than twice the length of the blunt scale and oblong achenium : otherwise as in 

 var. scirpoides. — Fairfield, New York. 



■>- ■>- Spikes rather large : perigynia thickened and spongy on the angles, with a more 

 or less dilated membranaceous margin or wing. — Ovales. 



37. C. sychnoc^pliala, Carey. Spikes densely clustered, forming a short 

 compound spiked head, subtended by 3 very long and unequal persistent leafy bracts ; 

 perigynia tapering from an abruptly contracted ovate base into a long slender beak, 

 somewhat exceeding the lanceolate abruptly mucrouate scale. ( C. cyperoides, 

 Dew., not of Z.) — Jefierson County ( Vasey & Knieskem) and Little Falls, New 

 York, Vasey. — Difiereut in habit from the rest of this section ; recognized at 

 onco by the ovoid compound spike, subtended by long leafy bracts, by which 

 the lower spikes are partly concealed. 



38. C. &rida, Schw. & Torr. <Spites 8-10, approximate (|' long), o67onj- 

 cylindrical, contracted at each end ; perigynia narrowly lanceolate (4-5 lines in 

 length), tapering into a long beak more than twice the length of the ,ouate-lanceolate 

 scale ; achenium sessile, narrowly oblong. ( C. Muskingumensis, Schw. ) — Wet 

 meadows, Ohio to Wisconsin and Kentucky. — In characters scarcely distin- 

 guished from the next, but strikingly different in appearance ; much larger, with 

 long, dry, and chaffy-looking spikes. 



39. C. SCOp^ia, Schk. Spikes 5-8, club-shaped, at length ovate, more or 

 less approximate, sometimes forming a dense head ; perigynia elliptical-lanceolate, 

 tapering into a long slender beak, longer than the lanceolate pointed scale ; achenium 

 distinctly stalked, exactly oval. — Low meadows : everywhere common. — Spikes 

 brownish or straw-colored when ripe. — Var. mInor, Boott. Spikes more rusty, 

 smaller, contiguous ; perigynia narrowly lanceolate. — Base of White Moun- 

 tains, New Hampshire, and northward. 



40. C. lagopodioldes, Schk. Spikes 10-15 or more, approximate, or 

 the lower more separated ; perigynia lanceolate, nearly twice the length of the ovate- 

 oblong rather pointed scale ; achenium narrowly oval, on a short stalk ; leaves very 

 tapering to the apex ; their sheaths loose, enlarging upwards, sharp-edged. — 

 Moist, rather shady places : common. 



41. C. crist^ta, Schw. Spikes smaZfer, 8-12 closely aggregated, globular, 

 greenish; perigynia oblong or ovate, recurved at maturity; scales obtuse; otherwise 

 as in the last, of which in former editions it was taken for a variety. — Wet or 

 moist ground : common. 



