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Carex scabrata Schwein.
EASTERN ROUGH SEDGE
Life   Plantae   Monocotyledoneae   Cyperaceae   Carex

Carex scabrata
© Copyright Ron Lance 2010 · -1
Carex scabrata

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FNA Vol. 23 Page 487, 486 Login | eFloras Home | Help
FNA | Family List | FNA Vol. 23 | Cyperaceae | Carex

346. Carex scabrata Schweinitz, Ann. Lyceum Nat. Hist. New York. 1: 69. 1824.

Carex scabre

Culms brownish at base, 30—90 cm. Leaves: sheaths glabrous; ligules 11—43(—53) mm; blades dark green, 10—40 cm × 4—8(—12) mm, those of prominent sterile shoots to 18 mm wide, prominently scabrous on adaxial surface. Spikes: 4—7(—9), oblong to short-cylindric; proximal spikes long-peduncled (occasionally branched), the distal progressively less so or subsessile; pistillate spikes closely 10—160-flowered (70—230-flowered if branched), 1—5.5(—7) cm × 5.5—8(—9) mm; staminate spike 1.5—5 cm. Pistillate scales nearly equaling bodies of perigynia, apex acute, acuminate, or short-awned, ciliolate. Perigynia olive-green, 2-ribbed, strongly 6—8-veined, obovoid, 3.4—4.5 mm, minutely scabrous-puberulent; beak 1.3—1.9 mm, orifice obscurely bidentate. Achenes obovoid, 1.8—2.3 × 1.2—1.5 mm. 2n = 54.

Fruiting Jun (mid May in South)—early Sep. Wet woods, springy thickets, especially seepage slopes, creek borders, ravine bottoms, or other wet spots in rich deciduous woods, less often in wet clearings and swamps, in calcareous, circumneutral, or acidic soils; 20—2000 m; N.B., N.S., Ont., P.E.I., Que.; Conn., Del., D.C., Ga., Ind., Ky., Maine, Md., Mass., Mich., Mo., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Okla., Pa., R.I., S.C., Tenn., Vt., Va., W.Va., Wis.

Carex scabrata is most common in the upland portions of its range, extending southward in the Appalachian system and reappearing westward (known from one historic collection each) in the Ozarks and Ouachitas.

There are reports for the supposed hybrid Carex crinita Lamarck × C. scabrata, described by M. L. Fernald (1895) and subsequently mentioned in lists of New England plants and by B. L. Robinson and M. L. Fernald (1908) and M. L. Fernald (1950). Fernald (1950) also listed a second hybrid of very similar parentage and equally doubtful status, C. gynandra Schweinitz × C. scabrata. Four specimens (in GH) supposedly representing both parental combinations are all C. gynandra (fide L. A. Standley, pers. comm).

Updated: 2024-05-12 11:16:07 gmt
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