Carex sect. Clandestinae |
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Habit | Plants cespitose, short to long rhizomatous. | ||||||||||||
Culms | red-purple at the base, shorter or longer than leaves. |
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Leaves | basal sheaths not fibrous; sheath fronts membranous; blades V-shaped in cross section when young, glabrous, widest leaf blades 2–4 mm wide, distal leaves bladeless or with blades 1 mm or less, not longer than sheaths. |
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Inflorescences | racemose, with 2–6 spikes; proximal nonbasal bracts bladeless or blade usually less than 2 mm, purple tinged, sheathing; lateral spikes pistillate or androgynous, with not more than 25 perigynia, sometimes basal, pedunculate, prophyllate, ovoid; terminal spike staminate or androgynous. |
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Perigynia | erect or ascending, veinless or veined with 2 prominent marginal veins, stipitate, obovoid, rounded-trigonous, 2–3.5 mm, base tapering or cuneate, apex abruptly contracted to beak, pubescent, sometimes glabrescent; beak straight or bent, 0.2–0.5 mm, orifice entire or emarginate. |
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Achenes | trigonous, rarely quadrangular, almost as large as bodies of perigynia; style deciduous. |
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Proximal | pistillate scales dark brown to black, apex obtuse to subacute, cuspidate or awned. |
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Stigmas | 3–4. |
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Carex sect. Clandestinae |
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Distribution | Circumboreal (circumpolar and north temperate) |
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Discussion | Species ca. 20 (4 in the flora). Carex sect. Clandestinae has close affinities with sect. Pictae Kükenthal and perhaps with sect. Acrocystis Dumortier. The Eurasian species, C. ericetorum Pollich, which has been placed in sect. Acrocystis by Eurasian authors, actually belongs in sect. Clandestinae, based on its bract morphology and perigynium pubescence. Although most species of sect. Clandestinae, as circumscribed here, form a cohesive morphologic group, C. pedunculata shows a number of similarities to C. baltzellii Chapman of sect. Pictae, including inflorescence morphology, scale morphology, and perigynium pubescence. Developmental and anatomic studies may help to determine whether the sections with pubescent perigynia exhibit homologous or analogous character states. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 23. | ||||||||||||
Parent taxa | |||||||||||||
Subordinate taxa | |||||||||||||
Synonyms | C. section Digitatae | ||||||||||||
Name authority | G. Don: in J. C. Loudon, Hort. Brit., 376. (1830) | ||||||||||||
Web links |