Fimbristylis cymosa

R. Brown

Prodr., 228. 1810.

Basionym: Fimbristylis obtusifolia (Lamarck) Kunth 1837
Synonyms: Fimbristylis melanospora Fernald Fimbristylis sintenisii Boeckeler Fimbristylis spathacea Roth Scirpus obtusifolius Lamarck
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 23. Treatment on page 128. Mentioned on page 127, 129.
Revision as of 20:05, 16 December 2019 by FNA>Volume Importer

Plants perennial, cespitose, (5–)10–60 cm, bases hard, glabrous; rhizomes absent. Leaves polystichous, mostly spreading-excurved, to 1/2 as long as culms; sheaths usually entire; ligule absent; blades linear, 2–3 mm wide, flat or shallowly involute, margin scabrid, apex blunt. Inflorescences: simple or compound anthelae with numerous small pedunculate clusters of sessile spikelets; scapes linear, distally terete, 1–2 mm thick; involucral bracts short, usually shorter than inflorescence. Spikelets greenish brown or yellow-brown, ovoid, 2–3 mm; fertile scales broadly ovate, 1–1.5 mm, obtuse or apically notched, midrib not excurrent. Flowers: stamens usually 1; styles 2-fid, slender, glabrous. Achenes dark brown to nearly black, tumidly obovoid, rarely obscurely 3-ribbed, 1 mm, faintly striate to variously warty, faintly reticulate. 2n = 56.


Phenology: Fruiting all year.
Habitat: Sands of sea beaches, brackish sandy open sites, often disturbed, commonly just in from mangrove or on sandy road shoulders
Elevation: 0–50 m

Distribution

V23 198-distribution-map.jpg

Fla., s Mexico, Central America, South America, Africa, Asia, Indian Ocean Islands, Pacific Islands, Australia.

Discussion

New World examples of Fimbristylis cymosa are almost exclusively bicarpellate, with bifid styles; Old World Oceania examples are tricarpellate, with trifid styles, a form not covered in this treatment.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Fimbristylis cymosa"
Robert Kral +
R. Brown +
Fimbristylis obtusifolia +
Fla. +, s Mexico +, Central America +, South America +, Africa +, Asia +, Indian Ocean Islands +, Pacific Islands +  and Australia. +
0–50 m +
Sands of sea beaches, brackish sandy open sites, often disturbed, commonly just in from mangrove or on sandy road shoulders +
Fruiting all year. +
Fimbristylis melanospora +, Fimbristylis sintenisii +, Fimbristylis spathacea +  and Scirpus obtusifolius +
Fimbristylis cymosa +
Fimbristylis +
species +