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Habit Plants cespitose or not, short to long rhizomatous, sometimes inconspicuously rhizomatous.
Culms

sometimes solitary, brown at base.

Leaves

basal sheaths not fibrous;

sheath fronts membranous;

blades M-shaped in cross section when young, adaxial side of blade with 2 lateral veins more prominent than midvein, widest leaves not more than 10 mm wide, glabrous.

Inflorescences

racemose, with (2–)3–6 spikes;

proximal nonbasal bracts leaflike, long-sheathing, sheath more than 4 mm, longer than diameter of stem;

lateral spikes pistillate or androgynous, rarely distal 1–3 spikes staminate, sometimes some basal, pedunculate, prophyllate;

terminal spike staminate.

Perigynia

ascending to spreading, minute red-brown or yellowish streaks and dots, distinctly veined, sessile, ellipsoid or rhomboid to broadly ovoid, obovoid, or subglobose, obscurely trigonous to round in cross section, base rounded, apex rounded, abruptly beaked, glabrous;

beak 0.1–0.9 mm, orifice entire to minutely bidentulate, teeth 0–0.3 mm.

Achenes

trigonous, smaller than bodies of perigynia;

style deciduous.

Proximal

pistillate scales with apex acute, acuminate, or short-awned.

Stigmas

3.

Carex sect. Granulares

Distribution
s Mexico; Temperate and subtropical regions of North America; Central America (Guatemala)
Discussion

Species 6 (4 in the flora).

Carex sect. Granulares is a monophyletic section diagnosed by at least three apormorphies: red-brown or yellowish cells scattered in the epidermis of the perigynia, often 25 or more perigynia per well-developed lateral spike, and perigynia loosely enveloping the achenes (R. F. C. Naczi 1992, 1997). Recent phylogenetic analyses indicate section Granulares is the sister group of a clade composed of sections Careyanae and Griseae (R. F. C. Naczi 1992).

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

Key
1. Plants with short or inconspicuous rhizomes; culms in tufts; terminal spike and distal lateral spike usually overlapping; proximal spikes usually arising from distal 1/2 of culms.
→ 2
1. Plants with long-creeping rhizomes; culms mostly solitary; terminal spike and distal lateral spike (unless staminate) usually separated; proximal spikes usually arising from proximal 1/2 of culms.
→ 3
2. Leaves green, not glaucous; longest bract blade (per plant) of distal lateral spike 1.6–4.6(–7.1) cm; ligule of proximal bract 0.5–6.5 mm; perigynia (1.6–)1.9–3 times as long as thick.
C. gholsonii
2. Leaves not green, usually glaucous; longest bract blade (per plant) of distal lateral spike 4.1–15.8 cm; ligule of proximal bract (2–)3–17.5(–26) mm; perigynia 1.4–2.2(–2.4) times as long as thick.
C. granularis
3. Staminate scales with apex acute to awned; widest leaves 2.8–8.3 mm wide; perigynium beak 0.3–0.9 mm.
C. microdonta
3. Staminate scales with apex rounded to obtuse; widest leaves 1.8–3(–4.4) mm wide; perigynium beak 0.1–0.3 mm.
C. crawei
Source FNA vol. 23. Authors: Theodore S. Cochrane, Robert F. C. Naczi.
Parent taxa Cyperaceae > Carex
Subordinate taxa
C. crawei, C. gholsonii, C. granularis, C. microdonta
Synonyms C. unranked Granulares
Name authority (O. Lang) Mackenzie: in N. L. Britton et al., N. Amer. Fl. 18: 260. (1935)
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