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Photo is of parent taxon

grassland sedge, gray sedge

Habit Plants without conspicuous rhizomes.
Culms

25–90 cm, 1.8–3 mm wide basally, 0.8–1 mm wide distally.

Leaves

sheaths tight, green, fronts hyaline;

ligules to 2 mm, shorter than wide;

widest leaf blades 2–3 mm wide, often papillose adaxially.

Inflorescences

with 4–8 spikes, 5–18 cm × 6–10 mm;

proximal internodes 20+ mm, usually more than 2 times as long as proximal spikes;

proximal bracts 1–4 cm;

spikes with 3–12 spreading perigynia.

Perigynia

pale yellow, finally dark brown to black, usually to 11-veined abaxially, 3.5–5.5 × (1.7–)2–2.6 mm, margins serrulate distally;

beak 0.8–1.5 mm, apical teeth 0.3–0.6 mm.

Achenes

elliptic-ovate, 2.3–2.5 × 1.5–1.7 mm.

Pistillate

scales hyaline or pale brown with green, 3-veined center, ovate-elliptic, 2.8–3.7(–4) × 1.3–2.6 mm, body as long as perigynium, apex acute to short-awned.

Anthers

1.5–1.9 mm.

Carex divulsa subsp. divulsa

Phenology Fruiting late spring–early summer.
Habitat Fields, pastures, scrub, forest edges
Elevation 10–200 m (0–700 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
DC; PA; ON; Europe; w Asia [Introduced in North America]
Discussion

Carex divulsa subsp. leersii (Kneucker) Walo Koch (Carex leersii F. W. Schultz, not Willdenow) has been reported from eastern North America. All the specimens appear to be best accommodated in subsp. divulsa, although they may differ slightly from the above description.

Carex divulsa and C. muricata are part of a taxonomically difficult complex native in Europe and western Asia, which has been variously treated as consisting of several distinct species or as a single species with up to four infraspecific taxa. The treatment here is based on that by A. O. Chater (1980), who recognized two species each with two subspecies.

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

Source FNA vol. 23, p. 292.
Parent taxa Cyperaceae > Carex > sect. Phaestoglochin > Carex divulsa
Synonyms C. virens
Name authority unknown
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