Carex riparia
CurtisRhizomes long; shoots tufted. Culms erect, trigonous, smooth or minutely scabrous-angled distally, 100–195 cm long, c. 2.5–4 mm diam. Leaves equaling or longer than culms, to 220 cm long, 8–17 mm wide, conduplicate or W-shaped to varying degrees in cross-section, septate-nodulose (more obvious when dry), margins strongly scabrid in the upper third; abaxial surface smooth or papillate (x 40 magnification); sheath pale to mid red, sometimes streaked, distinctly septate-nodulose, the ventral face of sheath ladder fibrillose (i.e. deteriorating into a network of fibres arranged in a feather-like pattern); ligule 15–22 mm long, obtuse. Spikes 5–10, lower spikes remote and upper spikes approximate, solitary at nodes; lowest involucral bract longer than inflorescence; upper 3–6 spikes male, oblong-cylindric or cylindric, 2-6 cm, subsessile; lower spikes entirely female, 2–5 cm long; fruiting spikes 6–9 mm diam.; male glumes 6–9 mm long, lanceolate, pale to mid chestnut brown (in Victorian plants) with midrib and margins paler, apex acute to acuminate, mucro 0.2–0.7 mm long; female glumes 6–7 mm long, oblong-lanceolate, dark, red-brown with pale midrib, apex acuminate; utricles 4.1–4.8 mm long, 1.4–1.8 mm diam., narrowly ovoid to narrowly ellipsoid, membranous 14–18-nerved, glabrous, green when immature, light brown at maturity; beak c. 0.5–0.8 mm long, truncate; style 3-fid. Nut c. 1.7 mm long, c. 0.8 mm diam., trigonous, brown. (Description based on the Victorian plants).
HSF. Native to northern Africa, Europe, temperate Asia.
Sparingly established in an artificial wetland at Warranwood (eastern suburb of Melbourne).
The identity of the plants in Victoria is uncertain. The distinction between Carex chilensis Brongn. (South America), C. lacustris Willd. (North America) and C. riparia Curtis (northern Africa, Europe, and Asia) is unclear, and they may be synonymous. Govaerts & Simpson (2007) accept C. lacustris as being distinct from C. riparia but treat C. chilensis as a subsp. of C. riparia, whereas Kew Plants of the World Online treat C. chilensis as an accepted species. Boott (1858) noted that “C. lacustris differs in no essential respects from the C. riparia of Europe and Asia. There is scarcely a single character in the one that may not be found in the other…I agree with Schkuhr and Schlechtendal in considering C. lacustris as inseparable from C. riparia.” Boott also treats C. chilensis as a taxonomic synonym of C. riparia. Given the lack of clarity regarding the differences between the three taxa, the default position of using the earliest published name Carex riparia Curtis has been adopted here.
Boott, F. (1858-1867). Illustrations of the genus Carex. Historiae naturalis classica 62: 1–233.