Volume III (1980) - Flora of New Zealand Adventive Cyperaceous, Petalous & Spathaceous Monocotyledons
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Cyperus L.

CYPERUS L.

Annual, or perennial, often rhizomatous herbs. Stems leafy at base or leaves reduced to basal sheaths. Inflorescence umbellate or capitate, surrounded by 1-several leaf-like involucral bracts. Spikelets compressed or subterete, 1-many-flowered, usually clustered in spikes at tips of rays or in a sessile spike. Flowers hermaphrodite. Glumes distichous, usually all fertile. Hypogynous bristles 0. Stamens 2-3, or 1. Style 2-3-fid, continuous with ovary, not thickened at base. Nut trigonous or biconvex. A tropical and warm temperate genus of c. 550 spp., one endemic in N.Z.; 13 adventive.

Spp. in N.Z. may be referred to the following subgenera -

  • A. Subgenus CYPERUS. 
  • B. Subgenus MARISCUS. 
    • Style-branches 3, nuts trigonous; spikelets occasionally with deciduous glumes and rhachilla deciduous from rhachis of spike just above an elevated scar-like base:
    • 3. *congestus, 6. *gunnii, 14. ustulatus
  • C. Subgenus KYLLINGA. 
    • Style-branches 2, nuts biconvex; spikelets 1-flowered, deciduous intact from rhachis of spike:
    • 2. *brevifolius, 8. *kyllingia
  • D. subgenus PYCREUS. 
    • Style-branches 2, nuts biconvex; spikelets several-flowered with deciduous glumes but rhachilla persistent on rhachis of spike:
    • 10. *polystachyos, 12. *sanguinolentus

Key

1
Rhizomes evident, spreading, tubers present or absent
2
Rhizomes absent, or very short and thick, tubers absent but stem bases often ± swollen
7
2
Inflorescence a single globose whitish-green head
3
Inflorescence umbellate, green- or yellow-brown to red-purple
4
3
Keel of glumes winged
Keel of glumes not winged
4
Rhizomes with tubers, slender
5
Rhizomes without tubers, thick, ± 5-10 mm diam
6
5
Tubers along rhizomes; spikelets red-to purple-brown
Tubers terminal on rhizomes; spikelets yellowish-brown
6.
Leaves with conspicuous white veins; involucral bracts ± equal
Leaves lacking white veins, involucral bracts dissimilar in length
7
Leaf-laminae with evident minute transverse septa between veins
8
Leaf-laminae lacking minute transverse septa; or leaves reduced to basal sheaths
9
8
Leaf-margins and midrib below, harshly serrate; spikelets in dense oblong spike 3-5cm long
Leaf-margins and midrib sparsely scabrid; spikelets in ± loose hemispherical spikes to 2 cm long
9
Spikelets narrow-linear (8)-10-20 × 1-2 mm, chestnut-brown to red-purple
10
Spikelets ovoid to oblong, 3-8-(12) × 2-3 mm, green, yellow-green, brownish-green or red-purple to black
11
10
Spikelets reddish-purple; minute transverse septa evident on leaf-sheaths; style-branches 3
Spikelets chestnut-brown; minute transverse septa few or absent on leaf-sheaths; style-branches 2
11
Plants obviously leafy; involucral bracts several, foliaceous, unequal in length
12
Plants with few filiform leaves or with leaves reduced to sheaths; involucral bracts 1-(2), setaceous or several foliaceous and ± equal
13
12
Leaves broad, 4-8 mm wide, margins finely serrate; spikelets light green to yellow-green
Leaves narrow, to 2.5 mm wide, margins smooth except near tip; spikelets dark red-purple to black
13
Inflorescence with solitary (rarely 2) setaceous bracts; plants small, stems and leaves filiform
Inflorescence with many foliaceous bracts; plants large, stems stout, leaves reduced to basal sheaths

The best known sp. is C. papyrus (Egyptian paper plant or papyrus), occasionally planted about ponds and water garden in N.Z., but not yet found wild here. A limited range of others are used here and overseas, as horticultural subjects, planted about aquaria and ponds, several often erroneously sold and planted as papyrus. A number of spp. with rhizomes and tubers are serious weeds of cultivation in tropical and temperate regions. The characteristic inflorescences with foliaceous bracts radiate below the umbels are responsible for the several common names applied in horticulture - star grass, star sedge, umbrella grass, umbrella palm, umbrella plant, and umbrella sedge.

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