Carex impressinervia Bryson, Kral & Manhart
Family: Cyperaceae
Ravine Sedge
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Plants densely cespitose; rhizome internodes 1.8-2.5 mm thick. Culms yellow-brown at base, 25-85 cm. Leaves: sheaths glabrous; blades green, widest blades 2.6-4 mm wide, smooth abaxially or midrib antrorsely scaberulous. Inflorescences 0.37-0.72 of culm height; peduncles of lateral spike barely scaberulous; peduncles of terminal spikes (0.5-)1.9-6.6(-8.9) cm, usually much exceeding lateral spikes; proximal bract sheath tight, abaxially glabrous, apex slightly concave; ligules 0.4-1.8(-3.6) mm; distal bract slightly shorter than to slightly overlapping, not exceeding terminal spike. Spikes 3-5, widely separate; lateral spikes pistillate or androgynous, with 5-11 perigynia, 11-43 × 3.9-8.6 mm, ratio of spike length (in mm) to flower number = 3-6.1; terminal spikes (19-)23-31(-40) × 2.5-3(-3.3) mm. Pistillate scales 3.3-6.6 × 1.6-1.9 mm, margins whitish, entire, apex with awn 0.2-3.7 mm. Staminate scales 4.5-6.8 × 1-1.3 mm. Anthers 2.8-3.8 mm. Perigynia spirally imbricate or separate, 40-49-veined, unwrinkled, obovoid or narrowly obovoid, obtusely triangular in cross section, 4.1-5(-5.5) × 1.6-1.8 mm, 2.4-2.9(-3.4) times as long as wide, dull, base gradually tapered, apex gradually or abruptly tapered to subacute; beak absent or excurved, to 0.4(-0.7) mm. Achenes obovoid, 3.1-3.5 × 1.5-1.8 mm, tightly enveloped by perigynia; stipe bent 5-30°, 0.4-0.7 mm; beak bent 30-60°, 0.2-0.4 mm.

Fruiting spring. Mesic deciduous forests, usually on gentle slopes above small streams in ravines, usually in shallow loams and sandy loams over clays; of conservation concern; 60-200 m; Ala., Miss., N.C., S.C.

Very rare and local, Carex impressinervia is known from only fifteen populations.