REPORT OF THE ST^TS BOTANIST 



1S3 



nerved, slightly turgid, scabro-pubescent, contracted into a short 

 obliquely toothed beak, exceeding the ovate acute or cuspidate 

 brown scale ; achenium obovate, acutely triangular. 



Scattered or in patches along streams and in wet places. 

 Common. June. 



A rather coarse but bright-green species with the fertile spikes 

 of a bristly or squarrose appearance when mature. It is some- 

 what stoloniferous. 



100. Carex filiformis L. 



Stems l°-3° high, slender, erect, obtusely angled, mostly 

 smooth ; basal bracts in length, pointed, purplish-brown, 



more or less fibrillose ; leaves V-l^" wide, carinate, prominently 

 grooved, smooth, rough margined, becoming doubled or involute 

 when dry, shorter than the culm, the radical ones numerous and 

 longer; staminate spikes 1-3, rarely 4, clavate or cylindrical, 

 p-2' in length, on a slender peduncle 1 r — 2-J-' long, subtended by a 

 scale-like, bristle-tipped, or short setaceous bract; pistillate spikes 

 1-4, usually 2, cylindrical, densely flowered, or sometimes loosely 

 at the base, subdistant or remote, sessile, or the lowest short- 

 stalked, often staminate at the apex, J-'-lJ' in length ; perigynia 

 obtusely triangular, ovoid, nerved, of a thick coriaceous texture, 

 densely pubescent or tomentose, slightly inflated, contracted into 

 a short, sharply toothed beak, mostly covered by the ovate 

 lanceolate, pointed or rough cuspidate brown scale, the latter 

 usually widely spreading at maturity. 



Swamps and wet meadows. Common. June, July. 



This species may be recognized by the long sterile, and gray- 

 ish fertile spikes, and by the usually erect, narrow, carinate 

 leaves. It seems to prefer cold elevated swamps and bogs, 

 though by no means limited to them. 



101. Carex lanuginosa Mx. 



Stems l°-2° high, stout, erect, acutely angled, roughish above 

 the middle; root stock somewhat creeping; leaves open and flat, 

 smooth, wide, shorter than the culm ; staminate spikes 



1-3, J-'-lJ' long, on stiff peduncles J'-lj-' in length; pistillate 

 spikes 2-4, J-'-l' in length, 2£"-5" thick, densely flowered, cylin- 

 drical, the uppermost usually sessile, the lower distant on short 

 stalks, or the lowest remote on a slender peduncle long, 



