Images
Click on image to view full size
Morphology
- Culm
- Erect, solitary or several, slender, somewhat 3-sided.
- Leaves
- Blades 4-9, mostly on lower 1/2 of culms, well-developed, to 4/5 inch wide, dark green; margins rough; lower leaf blades and sheaths cross-partitioned.
- Inflorescence
- Panicle-like, open or compact, usually twice-branched, terminal, consisting of dense, nearly spherical clusters of 8-20 spikelets borne at ends of rays; bracts several, leaf-like, often exceeding inflorescences.
- Spikelet
- Egg-shaped, brown, less than 1/2 inch long; flowers perfect; scales elliptic, dark green, turning brownish black or lead-gray with age; tips abruptly short-pointed; bristles 6, at bases of flowers, barbed, shorter than or slightly longer than achenes; stamens 3; styles 3-cleft.
- Fruit
- Achenes, egg-shaped, flattened to 3-angled, pale brown, 1-seeded.
Ecology
- Habitat
- Marshes, wet meadows, ditches, and stream edges.
- Distribution
- Throughout Kansas.
Practical Information
- Uses
- Native Americans and pioneers used the roots for food. Waterfowl eat the seeds.
Additional Notes
Comments
When mature, the inflorescences shatter if the plant is disturbed, scattering the achenes.
Quick Facts
- Plant Type
- Sedge
- Family
- Cyperaceae - Sedge Family
- Life Span
- Perennial
- Height
- 3 to 5 feet
- Last Updated
- 2007-06-29
Flowering Period
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Blooms: June, July