Carex comosa: taxon details and analytics
- Domain
- Kingdom
- Plantae
- Phylum
- Tracheophyta
- Class
- Liliopsida
- Order
- Poales
- Family
- Cyperaceae
- Genus
- Carex
- Species
- Carex comosa
- Scientific Name
- Carex comosa
Summary description from Wikipedia:
Carex comosa
Carex comosa is a species of sedge known as longhair sedge and bristly sedge. It is native to North America, where it grows in western and eastern regions of Canada and the United States, and parts of Mexico. It prefers loamy or sandy soil, and grows in meadows, along lake shores and river banks, and also in many types of wetlands. Carex comosa tolerates deeper water than most common species and is good for retention basins. This sedge produces clumps of triangular stems up to 100 or 120 centimeters tall from short rhizomes. The inflorescence is up to 35 centimeters long and has a long bract which is longer than the spikes. It is a cluster of several cylindrical spikes. The scales over the fruits taper into long, thin awns.
...Carex comosa in languages:
- English
- bristly sedge
- English
- longhair sedge
Images from inaturalist.org observations:
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Parent Taxon
Sibling Taxa
- Carex antoniensis
- Carex baileyi
- Carex bullata
- Carex capricornis
- Carex chilensis
- Carex cognata
- Carex comosa
- Carex durangensis
- Carex elliottii
- Carex excelsa
- Carex exsiccata
- Carex hookeri
- Carex hystericina
- Carex insularis
- Carex lurida
- Carex maorica
- Carex membranacea
- Carex montis-eeka
- Carex multispicata
- Carex niederleiniana
- Carex oligosperma
- Carex phragmitoides
- Carex polysticha
- Carex pseudocyperus
- Carex retrorsa
- Carex rostrata
- Carex rotundata
- Carex saxatilis
- Carex schweinitzii
- Carex sphaerogyna
- Carex thurberi
- Carex tuckermanii
- Carex utriculata
- Carex vesicaria
- Carex × hartii
- Carex × involuta
- Carex × justi-schmidtii
- Carex × olneyi
- Carex × paludivagans































































































































































