D I S C O V E R    L I F E   
Bee Hunt! Odonata Lepidoptera 
  HomeAll Living ThingsIDnature guidesGlobal mapperAlbumsLabelsSearch
  AboutNewsEventsResearchEducationProjectsStudy sitesHelp


Carex debilis Michx.
WHITE EDGE SEDGE
Carex flexuosa

Life   Plantae   Monocotyledoneae   Cyperaceae   Carex

Carex debilis
© Les Mehrhoff, 2008-2010 · 2
Carex debilis

Click on map for details about points.

IDnature guides

Links
  • Associates
  • Missouri Botanical Garden

  • We parsed the following live from the Web into this page. Such content is managed by its original site and not cached on Discover Life. Please send feedback and corrections directly to the source. See original regarding copyrights and terms of use.
  • Flora of North America

Associates · map
FamilyScientific name @ source (records)
Pucciniaceae  Puccinia caricina @ BPI (1)

Puccinia caricis-grossulariata @ BPI (1)

Puccinia caricis @ BPI (2)

Puccinia grossulariae @ BPI (1)

Uromyces uniporulus @ BPI (2)

go to Discover Life's Facebook group

Following modified from Flora of North America
   Top | See original

Link to Flora of North America home
 
All Floras       Advanced Search
FNA Vol. 23 Page 462, 468, 469 , 470 Login | eFloras Home | Help
FNA | Family List | FNA Vol. 23 | Cyperaceae | Carex

315. Carex debilis Michaux, Fl. Bor.-Amer. 2: 172. 1803.

White-edge sedge, weak sedge

Plants densely cespitose. Culms dark maroon at base; flowering stems 25—100 cm, as long as leaves at maturity or often longer, 0.5—1 mm thick, glabrous but scabrous within inflorescence. Leaves: basal sheaths maroon, bladeless, glabrous or rarely minutely pubescent; others grading from maroon to green on back, pale brown-hyaline or reddish brown on front, often red dotted, sometimes finely pubescent; blades flat, 2—7 mm wide, glabrous on both surfaces, margins and abaxial midribs often finely scabrous. Inflorescences: peduncles of lateral spikes slender, to 50 mm, usually shorter than spikes or only slightly longer, scabrous; of terminal spike 15—50 mm, finely scabrous; proximal bracts longer, or more often, shorter than inflorescences; sheaths 1—7 cm; blades 1—3.5 mm wide. Lateral spikes 2—5, 1 per node, well separated, erect at anthesis, soon nodding, pistillate with 10—25 perigynia attached 2—9 mm apart, linear, 25—80 × 2—3 mm. Terminal spike staminate or sometimes gynecandrous with a few pistillate flowers distally; 15—50 × 0.6—1.2 mm. Pistillate scales white-hyaline, sometimes tinged with pale brown or suffused with chestnut, with broad green midrib, finely red dotted, oblong, 2.8—6 mm, much shorter than mature perigynia, apex obtuse, acute or cuspidate, awn to 0.2 mm, glabrous, distal margin ciliate. Perigynia green to olive-green, usually red dotted, prominently 2-ribbed, finely 12—20-veined, loosely enveloping achene, fusiform to lance-ovoid, 5—9.5 × 1.1—2.2 mm, membranous, base acute, apex tapering gradually to abruptly contracted beak, glabrous or short-pubescent; beak bidentate 0.7—2 mm, including teeth to 1 mm. Achenes stipitate, 1.9—2.5 × 1—1.5 mm, stipe 0.5—1.5 mm.

Varieties 2 (2 in the flora): e North America.

Carex debilis is extremely variable and has been variously subdivided into as many as six varieties or three subspecies. Only two weakly differentiated varieties can be maintained: the typical variety with broadly southern distribution and C. debilis var. rudgei, which replaces it in the Northeast, the Midwest, and the eastern mountains. Both varieties appear to hybridize with C. virescens but these hybrids have not been studied to confirm parentage.

Updated: 2024-04-26 20:07:38 gmt
Discover Life | Top
© Designed by The Polistes Corporation