Carex cumulata (L. H. Bailey) Fernald
Family: Cyperaceae
Clustered Sedge
[Carex straminea var. cumulata ]
Carex cumulata image

Plants densely cespitose. Culms 20-80 cm; vegetative culms with leaf blades in stiff rosettes. Leaves: sheaths adaxially green-veined nearly to collar, with a white-hyaline band or sharp Y-shaped hyaline region at collar; adaxially firm, summits truncate, prolonged 0.3 mm beyond collar, abaxially finely papillose; distal ligules 2-7 mm; blades 2-4 per fertile culm, 14-30 cm × 3-6(-8) mm. Inflorescences dense or open, light green or brown, 1.5-4(-5) cm × 7-16 mm; proximal internode 3-5(-12) mm; 2d internode 2-9 mm; proximal bracts bristlelike or, sometimes, leaflike. Spikes 3-10, distant, distinct, conic or ovoid, 6-12 × 4-7 mm, base truncate or rounded, apex obtuse; staminate portion 2 mm or less. Pistillate scales white-hyaline or brown, with green or white midstripe extending to tip, broadly lanceolate, 2.8-3.5 mm, shorter and narrower than perigynia, apex firm, obtuse or acute. Perigynia appressed, greenish to dark brown, conspicuously 3-7-veined abaxially, inconspicuously veined adaxially, obovate, concavo-convex, 3-4.2 × (1.8-)2-3.2 mm, 0.5-0.7 mm thick, margin flat, including wing 0.5-0.8 mm wide; beak appressed-ascending, brown at tip, flat, ciliate-serrulate, abaxial suture with white or hyaline brown margin, distance from beak tip to achene 1.5-2 mm. Achenes elliptic, 1.7-1.9 × 1.1-1.25 mm, 0.5-0.6 mm thick; styles abaxially-adaxially bent. 2n = 36, 38.

Fruiting mid-late summer. Dry to wet, acidic sandy, gravelly, or rocky soils of barrens, acidic woods and thickets, drying peat bogs, often associated with Polytrichum; 0-300 m; Man., N.B., Nfld. and Labr., N.S., Ont., P.E.I., Que.; Conn., Ill., Ind., Maine, Mass., Mich., N.H., N.J., N.Y., Pa., R.I., Vt., Wis.

Carex cumulata is infrequent and seldom abundant in the habitats in which it is occurs. All reports of this species from Manitoba and extreme western Ontario, Canada are based upon historic collections made by John Macoun in 1872.

A few collecions appear to be sterile hybrids of Carex cumulata and C. scoparia. Carex cumulata and C. merritt-fernaldii sometimes occur together and frequently are mis-identified. Carex cumulata can be distinguished, however, by its adaxially green and veined sheaths, obovate perigynia and usually broader (3-6 mm) leaves.

From Flora of Indiana (1940) by Charles C. Deam

Known in Indiana only from Newton County where in 1936 a colony was found by Miss Madge McKee along a roadside ditch 3 miles northwest of Morocco. It is a local species throughout most of its range.

Tufted, aphyllopodic, 4-8 dm; main lvs 3-5 mm wide, shorter than the stiff stems, their sheaths ventrally green-veined almost to the summit; spikes 5-10, gynaecandrous, ovoid with rounded base, 7-10 mm, sessile, densely aggregated in an ovoid cluster 2-3 cm; pistillate scales much (usually 1-1.5 mm) shorter than the perigynia, hyaline, pale green or ±stramineous, obtuse; perigynia appressed, flatly planoconvex, 3.3-4 נ2.4-3.8 mm, nerveless on the ventral face of the obovate-orbicular body, abruptly rounded to the 0.75 mm beak; achene lenticular, 2 נ1.25 mm. Dry, rocky or sandy soil; P.E.I. to Wis., s. to N.J. and Ill.

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 cumulata image
Carex cumulata image
Carex cumulata image
Carex cumulata image
Carex cumulata image
Andrew Hipp  
Carex cumulata image
Andrew Hipp  
Carex cumulata image
Andrew Hipp  
Carex cumulata image
Andrew Hipp