Cyperus granitophilus

McVaugh

Castanea 2: 103, figs. 4–8. 1937.

Treatment appears in FNA Volume 23. Treatment on page 165. Mentioned on page 145, 166.

Herbs, annual, cespitose, with roots fibrous. Culms trigonous, glabrous. Leaves V-shaped to flat, (2–)4–11 cm × 3–4 mm. Inflorescences: rays absent; bracts 2–4, ± horizontal, flat, 1–6.5 cm × 2–3 mm; rachilla persistent, wingless. Spikelets 10–40, compressed, ovoid to linear-lanceoloid, quadrangular, 5–9 × 2–3 mm; floral scales deciduous, 5–20, spreading, pale greenish to reddish brown, laterally (5–)7–9(–13)-ribbed, ovate, 3–4 × 1–2 mm, apex straight, excurved mucronate, or cuspidate. Flowers: stamens 1–2; filaments 1.5 mm; anthers 0.8–1 mm, connective apex reddish yellow, less than 0.1 mm; styles 0.8–1 mm; stigmas 1–1.2 mm. Achenes brown to reddish brown, broadly ellipsoid to obovoid, 0.8–1.2 × 0.5–0.6 mm, base ± cuneate, apex truncate-obtuse, surfaces puncticulate.


Phenology: Fruiting summer.
Habitat: Thin soil over outcrops of granite or sandstone of the Piedmont and inner coastal plain
Elevation: 50–400 m

Distribution

V23 266-distribution-map.jpg

Ala., Ga., N.C., S.C., Tenn., Va.

Discussion

Cyperus granitophilus is documented as an autotetraploid derivative of C. squarrosus (L. W. Garoni and W. H. Murdy 1964).

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Cyperus granitophilus"
Gordon C. Tucker* +, Brian G. Marcks* +  and J. Richard Carter * +
McVaugh +
Ala. +, Ga. +, N.C. +, S.C. +, Tenn. +  and Va. +
50–400 m +
Thin soil over outcrops of granite or sandstone of the Piedmont and inner coastal plain +
Fruiting summer. +
garoni1964a +
Undefined subg. Chlorocyperus +, Cyperus subg. Mariscus +  and Undefined subg. Papyrus +
Cyperus granitophilus +
Cyperus subg. Cyperus +
species +