Perennial, sometimes annual, grass-like, often rhizomatous herbs, sometimes bearing corms or tubers, sometimes monoecious or with bisexual and unisexual florets together; usually associated with wet or damp conditions
Culms
(stems) 3-angled, less often cylindric, solid, sometimes hollow, nodose or nodes only ± basal and concealed by leaves, generally unbranched below inflorescence, erect or decumbent, rarely prostrate, sometimes rooting
Leaves
alternate, often 3-ranked, mostly crowded in a basal tuft, consisting of a closed, rarely split sheath, a long, narrow blade (sometimes filiform, setaceous or 0) and often a ligule at junction of sheath and blade
Inflorescence
terminal, capitate, paniculate, or anthelate (compact corymb-like inflorescence; the most common type especially in tribe Cypereae), of a single spikelet (rarely), or several to many spikelets; subtending bracts usually foliose, sometimes scale-like
Spikelets
bearing 1-many, usually bisexual, sometimes unisexual florets within distichous to spirally arranged imbricate glumes (in Schoenoxiphium and Carex female spikelet solitary, partially or wholly enclosed by sac-like perigynium)
Perianth
of 3-6 or more scales or bristles, or 0
Stamens
(1-)3, rarely more; anthers frequently basally appendaged and with a distal, usually barbate apiculus
Ovary
superior, 1-locular, with single basal ovule; style 1, sometimes thickened at base, simple or 2- or 3(or more)-branched, persistent, or sometimes deciduous above or below swelling
Fruit
an indehiscent nutlet or achene
Nomenclature:
Cyperaceae
Pax: 98 (1887)
Clarke: 149 (1897
Clarke: 193 (1898)
Clarke: 758 (1900)
Schonland: 1 (1922)
Levyns: 97 (1950)
Podlech: 1 (1967)
Gordon-Gray: 99 (1972)
Compton: 58 (1976)
Bond & Goldblatt: 38 (1984)
Forbes: 29 (1987)
Gordon-Gray: 1 (1995)
Goetghebeur (1998)
Distribution & Notes:
Global
: Genera ± 104, species ± 5 000, cosmopolitan; mostly in moist areas
Southern Africa
: Genera 40, species ± 400
References:
BOND, P. & GOLDBLATT, P. 1984. Plants of the Cape Flora: A descriptive catalogue.
Journal of South African Botany
Suppl. Vol. 13
BRUHL, J.J. 1995. Sedge genera of the world: relationships and a new classification of the
Cyperaceae
.
Australian Systematic Botany
8, 2
COMPTON, R.H. 1976. Cyperaceae. Flora of Swaziland.
Journal of South African Botany
Suppl. Vol. 11
FORBES, P.L. 1987. Cyperaceae. In T.K. Lowrey & S. Wright, The Flora of the Witwatersrand Vol. 1: The Monocotyledonae. Witwatersrand University Press, Johannesburg
GOETGHEBEUR, P. 1998.
Cyperaceae
. In K. Kubitzki,
The families and genera of vascular plants
4. Springer-Verlag, Berlin
GORDON-GRAY, K.D. 1971.
Fimbristylis
and
Bulbostylis
: Generic limits as seen by a student of southern African species. AETFAT Proceedings.
Mitteilungen der Botanischen Staatssammlung München
10
GORDON-GRAY, K.D. 1972.
Cyperaceae
. In J.H. Ross, The Flora of Natal.
Memoirs of the Botanical Survey of South Africa
No. 39
GORDON-GRAY, K.D. 1995.
Cyperaceae
in Natal.
Strelitzia
2
LEVYNS, M.R. 1950.
Cyperaceae
. In R.S. Adamson & T.M. Salter,
Flora of the Cape Peninsula
. Juta, Cape Town
LYE, K.A. 1971. The generic concept of
Bulbostylis
Kunth ex C.B.Cl. AETFAT Proceedings.
Mitteilungen der Botanischen Staatssammlung München
10
LYE, K.A. 1995.
Cyperaceae
.
Flora of Somalia
4
LYE, K.A. 1996. A new subspecies of
Bulbostylis hispidula
(
Cyperaceae
) from Somalia.
Willdenowia
25
MUASYA, A.M., SIMPSON, D.A., CHASE, M.W. & CULHAM, A. 1998. An assessment of suprageneric phylogeny in
Cyperaceae
using rbcL DNA sequences.
Plant Systematics and Evolution
211
PAX, F. 1887.
Cyperaceae
.
Die natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien
2, 2
PODLECH, D. 1967.
Cyperaceae
.
Prodromus einer Flora von Südwestafrika
165
SCHONLAND, S. 1922. Introduction to South African
Cyperaceae
.
Memoirs of the Botanical Survey of South Africa
No. 3
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