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
Carex striata Schwein.  
Family: Cyperaceae
Walter's Sedge
Carex striata image
  • FNA
  • Gleason & Cronquist
  • Resources
Peter W. Ball & A. A. Reznicek in Flora of North America (vol. 23)
Plants colonial; rhizomes long-creeping. Culms central, slender, trigonous, 40-90 cm, smooth, with marcescent remains of previous year´s leaves at base. Leaves: basal sheaths brownish and tattered on fertile culms, reddish purple on youngest culms, apex glabrous; ligules 1.8-12.5 mm; blades green, M-shaped, often ± septate-nodulose, 2.6-5(-6) mm wide, smooth abaxially, glabrous. Inflorescences 9-35(-45) cm; peduncle of terminal spike (2-)3.5-15 cm; rachis beyond the proximal pistillate spikes sharp-angled, finely scabrous; proximal 1-2 spikes pistillate, not or barely overlapping, ascending; distal spikes erect; terminal 1-3 spikes staminate. Pistillate scales lanceolate to ovate, acute to acuminate, sometimes ± smooth-awned to 1.1 mm, glabrous. Perigynia ascending, 14-22-veined, ovoid, 3.9-7 × 2-3.3 mm, glabrous or densely pubescent; beak 0.5-1.3 mm, bidentulate, teeth straight, 0.1-0.6 mm. Fruiting Apr-Jul. Open swamps, sedge meadows, bogs, boggy depressions, in acidic, often peaty soils; 0-100 m; Ala., Del., Fla., Ga., Md., Mass., Miss., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.C., S.C., Va. Southward from New Jersey, plants of Carex striata often have increasingly pubescent perigynia; northern, glabrous plants of that cline have been called C. striata var. brevis (A. A. Reznicek and P. M. Catling 1986b). Exceptionally robust plants of Carex striata with glabrous perigynia may key to C. hyalinolepis, from which they can be distinguished by their broadly ovoid perigynia, smooth-margined pistillate scales, and green leaves.

Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Vigorously colonial by creeping rhizomes, strongly aphyllopodic, 4-12 dm; main lvs 2-5 mm wide; staminate spikes 1 or 2, the terminal one 3-5 cm; pistillate spikes 1 or 2, densely fld, cylindric, erect, 2-4 cm, sessile or nearly so; lowest bract elongate, surpassing the stem; pistillate scales ovate, half to nearly as long as the perigynia, with red-purple sides and hyaline margins, acute to acuminate; perigynia coriaceous, ovoid, (4-)4.5-6.5 mm, conspicuously many-nerved (the nerves impressed), acuminately tapering into a bidentate beak a fourth as long as the body; achene concavely trigonous. Sandy swamps on the coastal plain; se. Mass. to Fla. Plants of our range have glabrous perigynia and represent the var. brevis L. H. Bailey. The rather ill-defined var. striata, with minutely hairy perigynia, is more southern. (C. walteriana)

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.
Carex striata
Open Interactive Map
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
University of Florida Herbarium
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
University of Florida Herbarium
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
University of Florida Herbarium
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata image
Carex striata 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