Carex sect. Divisae |
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Habit | Plants not cespitose, sometimes colonial, long-rhizomatous; rhizomes with tight cortex, not detaching on drying, mostly more than 1 mm wide, covered with persistant scales. | ||||||||||||||||||||
Culms | brown at base, rough, scabrous-angled distally or not. |
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Leaves | basal sheaths fibrous or not; sheath fronts membranous, with hyaline band; blades V-shaped in cross section when young or involute, widest leaves 1+ mm wide, glabrous. |
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Inflorescences | racemose, with 3–25+ spikes, ovoid to cylindric, often very condensed; proximal bracts scalelike or cuspidate, or absent, sheathless; spikes staminate, pistillate, or, sometimes, androgynous, sessile, without prophylls. |
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Perigynia | ascending to erect, both faces veined or veinless adaxially, often stipitate, ovate to narrowly ovate, plano-convex or biconvex, base rounded, ± spongy, margins acutely angled, apex tapering or contracted to beak, glabrous; beak 0.25–1.9 mm, at least 1/4 length of body, with abaxial suture, margins often serrulate, apex slightly bidentate. |
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Achenes | biconvex, smaller than bodies of perigynia; style deciduous. |
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Proximal | pistillate scales with apex acuminate, cuspidate, or short-awned. |
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Stigmas | 2. |
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Carex sect. Divisae |
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Distribution | North America; South America; Eurasia; South Africa; Australia |
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Discussion | Species 14 (6 in the flora). The key to species in sect. Divisae integrates both pistillate and staminate features, but staminate specimens of the section can be more difficult to determine than pistillate ones, especially if the anthers have shed. Staminate culms are usually taller at flowering time than pistillate culms and often conspicuous because of their yellow anthers. Two types of rhizomes exist in the section. Rhizomes of Carex douglasii, C. duriuscula, and the Eurasian C. stenophylla are slender and terminate in a shoot or more often a cluster of shoots and do not produce shoots regularly along their length. Rhizomes of all other species are coarse, thick, and long creeping and form lines of shoots regularly along their entire length. Eurasian species with slender rhizomes also differ from most other species in the section in all having androgynous spikes and conspicuously spongy-based perigynia and occurring in dryland habitats. T. V. Egorova (1999) placed these species with slender rhizomes onto their own section, Boernera. Carex douglasii, however, is intermediate in some features, having unisexual inflorescences and perigynia not or little spongy-based, and frequently occurring in wetland habitats. One species, C. chordorrhiza, placed by Egorova in the section is excluded here because it has a dramatically different growth form with noncreeping rhizomes and elongate, leafy vegetative culms that become prostrate and root at the nodes. (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 | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Name authority | H. Christ ex Kükenthal: in H. G. A. Engler, Pflanzenr. 20[IV,38]: 119. (1909) | ||||||||||||||||||||
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