152 MONOECIA, TRIANDRIA. 
Panicled Sedge. 
Grows with No. 6, to which it has some resemblance. Not 
common. Perennial. May. 
rosea. 8. C. spikclets about four, remote; fruit ovate, 
acuminate, bidentated : margin ciliate-serrated, 
horizontal ; scales ovate, obtuse, a leafy bracte 
at the base of the lower spikolet^TViUd. 
C. echinata, /3. rosea, Walhb. act. holm. 1803. p. 
147. (Pursh.) 
Icon. Schk. Car. t. Zzz. f. 179. 
Rose Sedge. 
In woods bordering the Wissahickon ; not uncommon. Pe- 
rennial. May. 
* * * Spikes many, summits feminine. 
kgopotiioi- 9, C. spikelets 11, alternate, elliptical, obtuse, 
close to each other; fruit ovate-lanceolate, 
marginated, bicuspidate ; a long leafy bracte at 
the foot of the last spike. — Willd. 
C. Richardi, Mich. 
Icon. Schk. Car. t. Yyy. f. 177. 
Hare^s-foot Sedge. 
In low grounds, common — particularly in the meadows of 
the Neck. Perennial. June. 
scoparia. 10. C. spikelets about five, alternate, elliptical, 
obtuse, almost close together; fruit ovate-lan- 
ceolate, marginate, bicuspidate ; bractes oblong, 
mucronate. — Willd. 
C. viridula, Mich. 
Icon. Schk. Car. t. Xxx. f. 175. 
Resembles No. 8, and grows in similar places ; very com- 
mon. Perennial. May. 
festucacca. 11. G. spikclcts about 8, nearly close togetlier, 
alternate, cylindrical, those in fruit clavatei 
