Cyperus pilosus

Vahl

Enum. Pl. 2: 354. 1805.

Common names: Fuzzy flatsedge
IntroducedIllustrated
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 23. Treatment on page 166. Mentioned on page 147, 165, 167.

Herbs, annual or perennial, cespitose; stolons slender, to 5 cm × 1.5 mm. Culms trigonous, 25–90 cm × 2 mm, hispidulous or glabrous on angles distally. Leaves flat, 10–35 cm × 3–10 mm. Inflorescences: spikes 1–4(–6), loosely oblong-ovoid, 2–3 × 1–2 cm; rays 3–10, 1–16 cm; 2d order rays to 3 cm; rachis hispidulous, prickles slender, 0.1–0.2 mm; bracts 3–5, ± ascending, flat, 5–35 cm × 0.5–5(–7) mm; rachilla persistent, wingless. Spikelets 15–40, linear-lanceoloid, compressed, 6–12 × 1.5–2 mm; floral scales deciduous, 8–16, light brown with clear border, laterally 2–3-ribbed, ovate, 1.8–2 × 1.2–1.6 mm; apex entire, emarginate, or mucronulate, mucro at most 0.3 mm. Flowers: anthers 0.4 mm; styles 0.6 mm; stigmas 1 mm. Achenes brown, sessile, broadly ellipsoid, 1–1.2 × 0.5 mm, apex obtuse, apiculate, surfaces puncticulate.


Phenology: Fruiting summer.
Habitat: Rice fields, wetlands, emergent muddy shores
Elevation: 0–50 m

Distribution

V23 269-distribution-map.jpg

Introduced; Fla., La., Miss., S.C., Asia.

Discussion

Cyperus pilosus was naturalized in the flora from eastern Asia, apparently early in the twentieth century.

The combination of hispidulous rachis and loosely oblong-ovoid spikes is sufficient to distinguish Cyperus pilosus from any others with deciduous floral scales.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Cyperus pilosus"
Gordon C. Tucker* +, Brian G. Marcks* +  and J. Richard Carter * +
Fuzzy flatsedge +
Fla. +, La. +, Miss. +, S.C. +  and Asia. +
0–50 m +
Rice fields, wetlands, emergent muddy shores +
Fruiting summer. +
Introduced +  and Illustrated +
Undefined subg. Chlorocyperus +, Cyperus subg. Mariscus +  and Undefined subg. Papyrus +
Cyperus pilosus +
Cyperus subg. Cyperus +
species +