I06 COXNECTICUT CIEOL. AND NAT. HIST. SURVEY. ] Bull. 



Carex scabrata Schwein. (rough). 



Local or occasional. Wet woods, about springs and along 

 streams. July. 



Carex filiformis L. (thread-like). 



Open swamps and bogs. Local in the northern part of 

 the state: Woodstock (Weatherby), Union and East Granby 

 (Weatherby & Bissell), Burlington and Salisbury (Bissell). 

 Becoming frequent southward. June. 



Carex lanuginosa Michx. (woolly). 



Carex filifonnis L., var. latifolia Boeckl. 



Wet meadows, bogs and about ponds. Rare in New Lon- 

 don County: Norwich (W. A. Setchell), Waterford and 

 Franklin (Graves). Frequent elsewhere. June. 



Carex vestita Willd. (clothed). 



Frequent or common. Sandy soils, either dry or moist. 

 June. 

 Carex oligosperma Michx. (few-seeded). 



Rare. Groton, in peat bogs (Graves), South Windsor (A. 

 E. Blewitt). June— July. 



Carex trichocarpa Aluhl. (with hairy fruit). 



Local. Thomaston, in wet ground (A. E. Blewitt). June 

 -July. 



Carex riparia W. Curtis (of river banks). 



Occasional or local. Wet meadows and swamps. June. 



Carex squarrosa L. (with spreading scales). 



Rare or local. Wet meadows and pastures: Guilford (G. 

 H. Bartlett), Chester (R. W. Woodward & Harger), North 

 Branford and East Haven (Harger), New Haven (G. G. 

 Merrell), Middletown (J. Barratt), Southington (Andrews 

 & Bissell). June — July. 



Carex typhina Michx. (like Typha, the Cat-tail). 

 Carex typhinoides Schwein. 



Rare. Wet alluvium and in meadows : Guilford (G. H. 

 Bartlett), East Haven (Fames), East Hartford (A. W. 

 Driggs), Hartford (Harger. H. S. Clark & Bissell). June — 



. July- 



