Hair Beakrush
Rhynchospora
capillacea
Sedge family
(Cyperaceae)
Description:
This herbaceous perennial sedge is ½–1¼' (15–37.5 cm.) tall, consisting
of either solitary or tufts of leafy culms (stems). Individual culms
are light
green, hairless, terete, and about 0.5 mm. in diameter. About 1-3
alternate leaves occur along each culm. The leaf blades are light to
medium green, hairless, more or less involute (rolled upward and
inward), about 0.5 mm. across, and up to 7" (17.5 cm.) long; they are
ascending and often
slightly arching. The leaf sheaths are light green and hairless; they
adhere tightly to the culms. Each fertile culm terminates in an
inflorescence consisting 1-2 terminal clusters of spikelets and a
single lateral cluster of spikelets. The spikelets in each cluster are
erect to ascending. There are typically 2–5 spikelets per cluster, but
sometimes solitary spikelets occur. Terminal clusters of spikelets
usually have more spikelets per cluster than solitary lateral
spikelets. Each spikelet has 1-5 fertile florets and their overlapping
scales. In addition, the lowermost scales in a spikelet are empty
because they lack fertile florets. Individual spikelets are 5-8 mm.
long, narrowly ellipsoid in shape, and reddish brown to brown at
maturity. Individual scales are narrowly elliptic in shape; they have
membranous margins and prominent midribs.
Each floret has 2-3 stamens
with pale yellow anthers and a style with a bifurcated white tip;
unisexual florets occur on rare occasions. Beneath each cluster of
spikelets, there are narrow leafy bracts up to ½" (12 mm.) long; except
for
their smaller size, they resemble the leaf blades. The blooming period
occurs from mid-summer to early autumn, lasting about 2-3 weeks for a
colony of plants. The florets are cross-pollinated by the wind.
Afterwards, fertile florets are replaced by beaked seeds
about 2.5–3 mm. long (one beaked seed per fertile floret). The body of
each beaked seed is 1.5–2 mm. long, while the tubercle at its apex is
1–1.5 mm. long. The seed body is oblanceoloid
in shape, somewhat flattened, and smooth, while its tubercle is
narrowly
trianguloid and somewhat flattened. Originating from the base of the
seed body, there are 6 slender bristles that extend upward beyond the
seed body to the tubercle, and sometimes a little beyond the tubercle.
These bristles usually have
minute retrorse (downwardly pointed) barbs along their sides, although
sometimes they are smooth. The root system consists of a crown of
fibrous roots and short slender rhizomes.
Cultivation:
The preference is full sun, consistently damp to wet conditions, and
barren soil containing calcareous sand, limestone gravel, or marl
(calcareous mud). This sedge does not tolerate much competition from
other ground vegetation.
Range
& Habitat: Hair Beakrush (Rhynchospora capillacea)
occurs in NE
Illinois, where it is native and rare (see Distribution
Map).
This sedge was collected once in
St. Clair county in SW Illinois over one century ago, but it has not
been observed in this area of the state since that time. Hair Beakrush
occurs in widely scattered areas of NE USA, Midwestern USA, and
several provinces in Canada. Habitats include grassy fens, marly
pannes, calcareous seeps, sand flats along Lake Michigan, interdunal
swales along Lake Michigan, and damp limestone cliffs. In Illinois,
this conservative species is found primarily in high quality calcareous
wetlands.
Faunal
Associations: A small number of insects have been reported
to feed on
Beakrushes (Rhynchospora
spp.). These insect species include
Sphenophorus callosus (Southern
Corn Billbug), Sphenophorus
costicollis
(Sedge Billbug), Dorydiella
kansana (Kansan Leafhopper), the larvae of
Euphyes dukesi (Duke's
Skipper), and the larvae of a butterfly,
Satyrodes appalachia (Appalachian
Brown); see Vaurie (1983), Landis et
al. (2011), and Barnes (1999) for more information. It is possible that
some waterfowl and rails
occasionally feed on the seeds of Beakrushes.
Photographic
Location: On limestone gravel along a marly panne in Lake
County,
Illinois. This marly panne was in a particularly wet area of a fen.
Comments:
In spite of the common name, 'Beakrush', this plant is actually a sedge
(Cyperaceae). Common names for Rhynchospora
capillacea are Needle
Beaksedge, Horned Beakrush, and Hair Beakrush. The last common
name is the one that is used here. Hair Beakrush can be readily
distinguished from other Beakrushes (Rhynchospora spp.)
in Illinois by its very
narrow leaves (about 0.5 mm. in width). In general, Beakrushes can
be distinguished from other sedges by the long conical or trianguloid
tubercles of their seeds; these tubercles are longer than the
corresponding seed bodies in some species. Spikerushes (Eleocharis spp.)
also have these tubercles on their seed bodies, but their tubercles are
shorter and more flattened than those Beakrushes, and they lack leaf
blades.