MONOECIA, TRIANDRIA. 
In moist places. Perennial. May. 
157 
26. C. feminine spike sub-solitary, about 6-flower- foiiicuiata, 
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. 
In damp woods and shady copses; common. Perennial 
June. £. more rare. 
xanthO“ 
physa* 
* * Male spikes solitary, female long* pedunculate ; sheaths 
short. 
£7. C. spikes pedunculated, feminine four, dis- piantaginea. 
tant; fruit elliptical, triquetrous, pedicellate, 
glabrous, shorter than the ovate-cuspidate 
scale ; bractes sheathing, somewhat leafy at the 
topi radical ones lanceolate, nerved. — Willd. 
C. latifolia, Wahlb. act. Holm. 1803. p. 156. 
(Pursh.) 
j Icon. Schk. Car. t. U. f. 70. et t. Kkkk. f. 
1 195. 
j Flantane Sedge. 
i Leaves very broad. In shady woods, common ; particularly 
j 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 fiexuosa, 
filiform, drooping peduncles ; fruit distant, al- 
