Carex, Dumort.
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.575.1.1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7406750 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E187E3-8E5C-1F5B-FF47-FC02FA2B2FC5 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Carex |
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Key to identification of species within section Ammoglochin and Carex disticha
When constructing the key, both data from Poland and other European countries have been taken into account (plants collected during fieldwork in Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, the Czech Republic, Austria, Armenia, Bulgaria) as well as herbarium material from B—Berlin-Dahlem, DE; L—Leiden, NL and W—Vienna, AT).
1a. All spikes with female flowers at the top ......................................................................................................................................... 2
1b. At least one spike with male flowers at the top ................................................................................................................................ 6
2a. Utricles usually more than 4 mm long, conspicuously veined ......................................................................................................... 3
2b. Utricles usually less than 4 mm long, obscurely veined .................................................................................................................. 4
3a. Leaves 1–2 mm wide, shorter than the stems; female glumes reddish-brown with pale or green midrib and hyaline margins.......... .................................................................................................................................................................................... Carex colchica View in CoL
3b. Leaves 2–3 mm wide, exceeding stems; female glumes pale, whitish with green midrib ............................ Carex pseudobrizoides View in CoL
4a. Leaves not more than ½ as long as the stems; later in the season the leaves get more elongated and may exceed the fruiting stems; spikes dark brown; spikes straight; utricles usually less than 3.5 mm, narrowing suddenly into the beak ................ Carex praecox View in CoL
4b. Leaves exceeding the stems; at least the middle spikes usually slightly curved; utricles usually more than 3.5 mm, tapering into the beak ................................................................................................................................................................................................... 5
5a. Spikes pale whitish-cream; utricles narrow, not wider than 1.5–2 mm; ratio of utricle length/utricle width around 3.6 ................... ................................................................................................................................................................................... Carex brizoides View in CoL
5b. Spikes light brown; utricles more than 2.4 mm wide; ratio of utricle length/utricle width around 2.8 ...................... Carex curvata View in CoL
6a. Middle spikes entirely male ........................................................................................................................................ Carex disticha View in CoL
6b. Middle spikes with both male and female flowers ........................................................................................................................... 7
7a. Middle spikes with female flowers above and male below ........................................................................... Carex pseudobrizoides View in CoL
7b. Middle spikes with male flowers above and female below, sometimes all spikes with female flowers at the top .......................... 8
8a. Utricles broad, 1.80–2.38 mm, conspicuously veined; nuts well-developed ............................................................ Carex arenaria View in CoL
8b. Utricles narrow, 1.30–1.50 mm, obscurely veined; nuts seldom well-developed ........................................................ Carex repens View in CoL
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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