Carex michauxiana explained

Carex michauxiana, also known as Michaux's sedge, carex de Michaux or yellowish sedge in Canada,[1] is a tussock-forming species of perennial sedge in the family Cyperaceae. It is native to eastern parts of North America and parts of Asia.[2]

Description

The sedge has a tufted habit and is typically across. It has smooth culms with a triangular cross-section tat are in length. The yellowish to grenn leaves form from a thin outgrowth at the junction of leafstalk (a ligule). The leaves are flat to M-shaped and wide and smooth on the lower surface but covered with small dots on the upper surface particularly toward the end.[3]

Taxonomy

The species was first formally described by the botanist Johann Otto Boeckeler in 1877 as a part of the work Linnaea..[4] It has three synonyms;

There are also two recognised subspecies;

It is closely related to Carex dolichocarpa, which is found in Asia.[5]

Distribution

The plant is found in mostly in temperate biomes across the Northern hemisphere. In North America it is found from Saskatchewan in the north west to Newfoundland in the north east down to Minnesota in the south east and New York in the south east. In Asia it is found in far eastern Russia in Kamchatka extending south through Japan and north eastern China. It is also found in New Guinea.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Carex michauxiana Boeckeler. 28 November 2022. VASCAN. Canadensys.
  2. Web site: Carex michauxiana Boeckeler . 28 November 2022 . Kew Science – Plants of the World Online.
  3. Web site: Carex michauxiana Boeckeler. 29 November 2022. World Flora Online.
  4. Web site: Carex michauxiana Boeckeler . 28 November 2022 . Missouri Botanical Garden. Tropicos.
  5. Web site: Carex michauxiana Boeckeler, Linnaea. 2 December 2022. Flora of North America.