
MONOECIA, TRIANDRIA. 157 
In moist places. Perennial. May. 
26. C. feminine spike sub-solitary, about 6-flower- folliculata, 
ed, peduncles sub-exserted; fruit ovate, ven- 
tricose, nerved, rostrate, 2-cleft at the mouth, 
longer than the ovate scale.—Willd. 
Icon. Schk. Car. t. N. f. 52. 
Round-spiked Sedge. 
Yellow Sedge. B xantho- 
: . hy . 
In damp woods and shady copses; common, Perennial." 
June. 2. more rare. 
——_—— 
** Male spikes were? female long pedunculate; sheaths 
short. 
27. C. spikes pedunculated, feminine four, dis- plantagines. 
tant; fruit elliptical, triquetrous, pedicellate, 
glabrous, shorter than the ovate-cuspidate 
scale; bractes sheathing, somewhat leafy at the 
top; radical ones lanceolate, nerved.— Willd. 
C. latifolia, Wahlb. act. Holm. 1803. p. 156. 
(Pursh.) 
Icon. Schk. Car. t. U. f. 70. et t. Kkkk. f. 
195. 
Plantane Sedge. 
Leaves very broad. In shady woods, common; particularly 
on the Wissahickon. Perennial. May, June. 
28. C. feminine spikes three, remote, lower ones anceps. 
pedunculate ; fruit ovate, nerved, membrana- 
ceous at the mouth, longer than the oblong-mu- 
cronate scale.— Willd. 
C. striatula, Mich. 
Icon. Schk. Car. t. Fff. f. 128. 
Two-edged Sedge. 
In the meadow grounds of Jersey. Perennial. June. 
29. C. feminine spikes about four, remote, with fexuos. 
filiform, drooping peduncles ; fruit distant, al- 

