rostrata. 
railiarise 
lupulina, 
oligocarpae 
MONOECIA, TRIANDRIA. 
Long-pointed Sedge. 
‘In wet woods and boggy ground, not rare. Perennial. 
May. 
22. C. masculine spikes solitary; scales oblong 
with very long awns, feminine cylindrical, two, 
the lower on projecting peduncles; stigmas 
three; fruit ovate, inflated, 5-nerved, rostrate, 
bidentate at the mouth, longer than the oblong 
aristated scale.—Willd. 
€. rostrata, Muhl. 
Beaked Sedge. 
In damp woods; common. Perennial. June. 
23. C. feminine spike for the most part solitary, 
sessile, ovate; bracte setaceous ; fruit globose, 
smooth.—.MWich. 
On the shady banks of the Wissahickon; not unfrequent. 
Perennial. May. 
24. C. feminine spikes three, on included peduncles; 
oblong, close together ; bractes very long, leafy ; 
fruit ovate, ventricose, nerved, very long, conic- 
rostrate, bicuspidate at the mouth, much longer 
than the ovate-mucronate scale.— Willd. 
C. lupulina, Muhl. 
Icon. Schk. Car. t. Ddd. f. 123. and t. ii. f. 
194. 
Hop-like Sedge. 
Fruit heads very large. In the boggy woods of Jersey, on 
the Woodbury road; not common. Perennial. June. 
25. C. feminine spikes 2, 5 or 4-flowered, pedun- 
culated below ; fruit subrotund-triquetrous, obo-_ 
vate, rostellates mouth entire, longer than the 
oblong-mucronate scale.—Willd. 
C. paupercula, Mich. 
Icon. Schk. Car. t. Vvv. f. 170. 


