The green links below add additional plants to the comparison table. Blue links lead to other Web sites.
enable glossary links

Great Basin bulrush, Nevada bulrush, Nevada clubrush

Rhizomes

1–4 mm diam., tough, hard.

Culms

ridged, 10–70 cm × 0.5–2 mm, hard, without evident internal air cavities.

Leaves

5–10;

sheaths loose, the proximal often disintegrating to prominent fibers, often stramineous or brownish, papery, fronts membranous-hyaline with delicate veins, summit slightly concave with V-shaped veinless area and often disintegrating;

blades 0.5–1 times as long as culms, hard, without evident internal air cavities;

distal blades 3–30 cm × 0.5–2 mm, longer than sheaths, margins sparsely antrorsely spinulose or papillose, apex sharply acute.

Inflorescences

proximal involucral bract 1–15 cm, resembling foliage leaf blade.

Spikelets

ovoid to lanceoloid or terete, 5–20 × 3–5 mm;

scales pale to dark red-brown, midribs usually stramineous, smooth;

proximal 1 or 2 scales often resembling involucral bracts, with awnlike blades, to 15 mm;

other scales in proximal part of spikelet prominently 9-veined, ovate, 4 × 3 mm, papery to often cartilaginous, margins hyaline, ciliolate, apex entire, acute to rounded.

Flowers

perianth bristles pale brown, unequal.

Achenes

greenish to orange-brown, broadly obovoid, 2–2.3 × 1.5–1.7 mm.

Amphiscirpus nevadensis

Phenology Fruiting summer.
Habitat Sunny, saline, often alkaline, seasonally wet places
Elevation 400–2400 m (1300–7900 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
CA; CO; MT; ND; NE; NV; OR; UT; WA; WY; AB; BC; SK; South America (Argentina, Chile)
[WildflowerSearch map]
Discussion

Amphiscirpus nevadensis superficially resembles some dwarfed forms of Schoenoplectus pungens, with which it sometimes grows; S. pungens is readily distinguished by its trigonous culms and leaf blades, prominently 2-fid, awned scales, and beaked achenes. Amphiscirpus nevadensis differs from all North American species of Schoenoplectus in its wiry culms and leaves, prominently ciliate ligules, absence of evident internal aerenchyma, and beakless achenes. It has been reported from Delta, Manitoba.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Source FNA vol. 23, p. 28.
Parent taxa Cyperaceae > Amphiscirpus
Synonyms Scirpus nevadensis
Name authority (S. Watson) Oteng-Yeboah: Notes Roy. Bot. Gard. Edinburgh 33: 308. (1974)
Web links