236 CYPBRACEAE (SEDGE FAMILY) 



95. C. defl^xa Hornera. Diffuse and low, tufted; leaves soft, 1-3 nim 

 wide; culms 0.2-4 dm. high, setaceous, more or less curved or spreading. 



little exceeding or shorter than the leaves ; staminate spike small, 

 sometimes Invisible in the head; pistillate spikes 2-^, 2-8- 

 flowered, green, or green and .brown, all aggregated into a head, 

 or the lowest one slighty remote, short-peduncled and subtended 

 by a leafy bract ; radical spikes usually present ; perigynia very 

 448. o. deiiBxa. ^^^^ j^jj^ much contracted below, sparsely hairy or nearly 

 smooth, the beak flat and very short, longer than the scales. (Including 

 var. Deanei Bailey.) — Open woods, clearings, and mountain slopes, Nfd. 

 to Alaska, s. to Mass., Pa., Mich., Minn., Wash., etc. May-Aug. (Greenl.) 

 Fig. 448. 



96. C. Albicans Willd. Slightly caespitose ; culms straightish,\-b.?> Am. t&W, 

 much exceeding the soft narrow (1.5-3 mm. wide) paZe leaves; pistillate spikes 

 globose or short-ovoid, 1-3, all approximate, or the lowest slightly 

 remote, naked or subtended by a narrow bract ; staminate spike 

 sessile, often hidden in the head; perigynia ellipsoid, pubescent, 

 with a short cylindric beak, mostly exceeding the broad scales. 

 — Open woods or cool rocky banks, chiefly in calcareous regions, 

 e. Que. to the Yukon, s. to Mass., Pa., Mich., and Minn. May- 

 July. Fig. 449. **''■ ^- "'Weans. 



97. C. communis Bailey. Forming small tufts, never sto- 

 loniferous ; culms 1-6 dm. high, much exceeding the leaves; 

 leaves flat, becoming 2-5.5 mm. wide; inflorescence 1-8 cm. 

 long ; the 1-5 pistillate spikes mostly distinct, often remote, rarely 

 1 cm. long, the lowest often leafy-bracted ; staminate spike from 

 green to chestnut, sessile or stalked, 3.5-20 mm. long ; perigynia 

 hairy, 2.5-4 mm. long, the body subglobose to broadly ellipsoid, 

 the base elongate and spongy, the beak broad ; scales ovate, 

 acuminate, greenish-brown to reddish, about equaling the peri- 

 gynia. (Including var. Wheeleri Bailey ; C. pedicellata Britton ; 

 O. piluUfera Fernald, not L.) — Dry open woods, etc., e. Que. 



it;n n „«mm„„i= ^0 B. C, s. to Pa., 0., Wise, and la.; and along the mts. to 



450. o. eommnms. ^.^ May-July. Fig. 450. 



^ 98. C. viria Muhl. Densely tufted; leaves soft and very nar- 

 row ; the capillary culms variabje in length, lax, often twice longer 

 than the leaves, 1-5 dm. long ; pistillate spikes closely aggregated, 

 or rarely somewhat loosely disposed but never scattered, all strictly 

 sessile, green ; radical spikes none ; lower bract usually present ; 

 perigynia about the length of the sharp scale. — Banks and dry 

 woods. Me. to Ont., and southw. Apr. -July. Fio. 451. In 

 var. colorXta Bailey the scales are purple. 451. c. vnria. 



99. C. nbvae-dngliae Schwein. Very slender and 

 soft, loosely caespitose, 1-4 dm. high ; culms little longer than the 

 very narrow pale-green leaves ; staminate spike exceedingly narrow 

 (0.5-1 cm. long, 0.5-1 mm. thick), mostly minutely peduncled; pistil- 

 late spikes 2, or rarely 3, the upper one near the base of 

 the staminate spike, the lower very short-peduncled 

 and remote and subtended by a leafy bract which 

 nearly or quite equals the culm, rather loosely 3-10- 

 flowered; perigynia very narrow, small, very thin, 

 slightly hairy, the beak sharp and prominent. — Oj^en 

 woods. Que. and N. S. to Mass. and N. Y. ; com- 



,,„ „ mon north w., rare southw. June, July. Fig. 



452. C. novae- .,„ 



ang ae. ^q^j p pgnjgyiyjjjigjj Lam. Strongly stolonife- 



rous, the small tufts with reddish bases and usually with persist- 



int brush-like tufts of fibers ; leaves 1.5-3.5 mm. broad, shorter than, 



equaling or often exceeding the slender culms (0.5-4 dm. high); pistillate spikes 



1-4, globose or ovoid, approximate or remote, the lowest often leafy-bracted ; 



