Log In New Account Sitemap
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Images
    • Image Browser
    • Search Images
  • Mid-Atlantic Floras
    • Delaware
    • Maryland
    • New Jersey
    • New York
    • Pennsylvania
  • NYC EcoFlora
    • Vascular Checklist
    • Identification Key
    • Central Park
    • Additional Local Lists
    • More Details About Project
  • Interactive Tools
    • Dynamic Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Crowdsource Data Entry
  • Other SEINet Portals
    • Arizona - New Mexico Chapter
    • Consortium of Midwest Herbaria
    • Intermountain Region Herbaria Network (IRHN)
    • Mid-Atlantic Herbaria
    • North American Network of Small Herbaria
    • Northern Great Plains Herbaria
    • Madrean Archipelago Biodiversity Assessment (MABA) - Flora
    • Red de Herbarios del Noroeste de México (northern Mexico)
    • SERNEC - Southeastern USA
Scirpus longii Fernald  
Family: Cyperaceae
Long's Bulrush
Scirpus longii image
  • FNA
  • Gleason & Cronquist
  • Resources
Alan T. Whittemore & Alfred E. Schuyler in Flora of North America (vol. 23)
Plants spreading ± evenly over substrate; rhizomes thick, elongate rhizomes. Culms: fertile ones upright or nearly so; nodes without axillary bulblets. Leaves 4-7 per culm; sheaths of proximal leaves green or brownish; proximal blades and sheaths with septa few to many, conspicuous or inconspicuous; blades 30-54 cm × 5-9 mm. Inflorescences terminal; rays ascending or sometimes spreading, scabrous throughout or main branches smooth proximally, rays rarely with axillary bulblets; bases of involucral bracts black, glutinous. Spikelets in open cymes, central spikelet of each cyme sessile, others usually pedicellate, spikelets ovoid or ellipsoid to cylindric, 3.5-10.5 × 2-3(-5) mm; scales blackish, at least distally, with pale midribs, elliptic or narrowly elliptic to obovate or narrowly obovate, 2-3.1 mm, apex rounded to obtuse or minutely apiculate, apiculus (if present) less than 0.05 mm. Flowers: perianth bristles persistent, 6, slender, contorted, much longer than achene, smooth, projecting beyond scales, mature inflorescence appearing woolly; styles 3-fid. Achenes reddish brown, elliptic or obovate in outline, plano-convex or plumply trigonous, 0.7-1 × 0.4-0.5 mm. 2n = 66, 68. Fruiting early summer (Jun). Marshes; 0-200 m; N.S.; Conn., Maine, Mass., N.H., N.J., N.Y., R.I. Although large populations of Scirpus longii exist, collections are rarely made because flowering culms usually are not present and only vegetative portions of the plant can be collected. Fire and other disturbances enhance culm formation. The report from North Carolina (M. L. Fernald 1943d) was based on a misidentified specimen. Historic populations known from Connecticut (South Windsor, Hartford County) and New York (The Aqueduct, Long Island) are believed to have been extirpated. Scirpus longii rarely hybridizes with S. cyperinus.

Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Much like no. 28 [Scirpus cyperinus (L.) Kunth], but colonial from long, stout rhizomes, and rarely flowering; base of invol blackish and glutinous; scales 2-3 mm, blackish, rounded and not mucronulate at the tip; achenes reddish-brown; 2n=66, 68. Marshes near the coast from N.S. and Me. to s. N.J. Fr June. Hybridizes with no. 28.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Scirpus longii
Open Interactive Map
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Scirpus longii image
Click to Display
100 Initial Images
- - - - -
View All Images
The National Science Foundation
This project made possible by National Science Foundation Awards 1601697, 1600981, 1601393, 1600976, 1601429, 1601101, 1601503
Powered by Symbiota