568 CYPERACE^E. (SEDGE FAMILY.; 



§ 1. PSILOCARYA, Torr. Spikes ovate, terete, the numerous scales all adkt 

 and regularly imbricated; a perfect flower under each : stamens mostly 2: style 

 2-cleft ; its base or the greater part of it enlarging and hardening to form the beak 

 of the lenticular or tumid more or less cross-wrinkled achenium : bristles wholly 

 wanting (whence the name). 



1. R. SCirpoides. Annual, 4' -10' high; leaves fiat; spikes in broad 

 and open cymes, 20 - 30-flowered ; scales oblong-ovate, acute, chestnut-colored; 

 achenium obscurely wrinkled, beaked with the sword-shaped almost wholly per- 

 sistent style, and somewhat margined. (Psilocarya scirpoides, Torr. & Ed. 2.) 

 — Inundated places, Rhode Island and Plymouth, Massachusetts. 



(R. nitens (Scirpus nitens, Vahl. Psilocarya rhynchosporoides, Too.), like 

 this, but with a more wrinkled and short-beaked achenium, takes its place in 

 Southern States.) 



§2. EURHYNCHOSPORA. Spikes terete or biconvex, few -many-flowered ; 

 some of the lower scales almost always empty : stamens mostly 3 : style conspicu- 

 ously 2-cleft, its base only forming the tubercle or beak of the mostly lenticular 

 achenium : bristles of the perianth usually present, and merely rough or barbed- 

 denticulate (not plumose). 

 * Achenium transversely wrinkled: bristles mostly 6, upwardly denticulate. 



2. R. cymdsa, Nutt. Culm triangular; leaves linear (|' wide) ; cymes 

 corymbose; the spikes crowded and clustered; achenium round-obovate, twice the 

 length of the bristles, four times the length of the depressed-conical tubercle. — 

 Low grounds, Penn. and New Jersey to Virginia, and southward. 



3. R. Torreyana, Gray. Culm nearly terete, slender ; leaves bristle-form ; 

 cymes panicled, somewhat loose, the spikes mostly pedicel! fd; achenium oblong- 

 obovate, longer than the bristles, thrice the length of the broad compressed- 

 conical tubercle. — Swamps; pine barrens of New Jersey, and southward. 



4. R. inexpansa, Vahl. Culm triangular, slender; leaves narrowly linear; 

 spikes spindle-shaped, mostly pedicelled, in drooping panicles ; achenium oblong, half 

 the length of the slender bristles, twice the length of the triangular-subulate 

 tubercle. — Low grounds, Virginia and southward. 



* * Achenium smooth and even. 

 -t- Bristles of the perianth 6, long and conspicuous, upwardly denticulate. 



5. R. flisca, Roem. & Schultes. Leaves bristle-form, channelled; spikes 

 ovate-oblong, few, clustered in 1 -3 loose heads (dark chestnut-color) ; achenium 

 obovate, half the length of the bristles, equalling the triangular-sword-shaped acute 

 tubercle, which is rough-serrulate on the margins. — Low grounds, New Jersey 

 to Maine and Lake Superior : rare. — Culm 6'- 12' high. (Eu.) 



6. R. gracilenta, Gray. Leaves narrowly linear; spikes ovoid, in 2-4 

 small clusters, the lateral long-ped uncled ; achenium ovoid, rather shorter than the 

 bristles, about the length of the flat awl-shaped tubercle. — Low grounds, S. 

 New York, New Jersey, and southward. — Culm very slender, l°-2° high. 



-t- ■*- Bristles none or 1-3 and minute: spikes pale, \-flowered. 



7. R. pallida, M. A. Curtis. Culm (l°-2° high) acutely triangular; 

 leaves and spikes as in the next species, but only a terminal dense cluster, 

 which is less white or turns pale reddish-tawny; achenium obovatc-lenticular, 



