Description:
This sedge is a summer annual that is highly variable in height,
although it is typically about ½–1½' (15–45 cm.) tall at maturity. One
or more erect to ascending culms develop from the crown of the plant;
they are mostly light green, but often become purplish red near their
bases. The culms are also bluntly 3-angled, hairless, and smooth. About
2–3 alternate leaves occur near the base of each culm; their
blades are ascending, widely spreading, or arching. The leaf sheaths
are light green to purplish red and hairless.
The leaf blades are up to 1¾' (52.5 cm.) long and 8.5 mm. across; they
are centrally grooved and are shallowly M-shaped in cross-section. The
upper leaf surface is light green, hairless, and somewhat shiny, while
the lower leaf surface is whitish green, somewhat glaucous,
and dull-colored.
The
culms terminate in a compound umbel of floral spikes that can span up
to 6" (15 cm.) across and 4" (10 cm.) tall. A compound umbel typically
has 3–8 straight peduncles (floral stalks) up to 3" (7.5 cm.) long that
are strongly ascending to widely spreading; they are bluntly 3-angled
to terete, light green, hairless, and rather stiff. At the tips of
these peduncles, there are either solitary or a divergent cluster of
2–6 floral spikes. When clusters of floral spikes occur, they are
nearly sessile to short-stalked. Floral spikes are ½–1½" (12.5–37.5
mm.) long, ½" (12.5 mm.) across or slightly more, and
cylindrical
in outline, resembling a bottle brush. Each floral spike has a
flattened and slightly zigzag rachilla
(central stalklet) along which there are 30–80 linear spikelets. The
spikelets are more or less perpendicular to the rachilla. The color of
the
spikelets depends on the maturity of their scales; they are initially
light yellowish green, but become yellowish to reddish brown with green
central
veins during the blooming period, later becoming a deeper shade of
brown.
Each
spikelet is about 5–8 mm. long and 1–1.5 mm. across, consisting of
12–22
partially overlapping floral scales. These scales are oblong-ovate in
shape and keeled along their central veins; they have mucronulate tips
(short-pointed) that cause the margins of the somewhat compressed
(flattened) spikelets to appear slightly jagged. Individual scales are
only 1–1.5
mm. long; each one has a perfect floret with a tripartite style and 3
anthers. The inflorescence of this sedge also produces several leafy
bracts that are similar in appearance and size to the leaves at the
base of the culm; these leafy bracts are ascending to widely spreading
with the tips of the larger leafy bracts arching toward the ground. The
blooming period occurs during late summer to early autumn, lasting 2–3
weeks for a colony of plants. The florets are cross-pollinated by the
wind. Afterwards, the florets are replaced by small achenes. The
pale-colored achenes are about 0.5–1 mm. long, ovoid, and 3-angled in
shape; they are light yellow, light gray, or light reddish brown. The
achenes are small enough to be blown about by the wind or carried
by water to some extent. The root system has fibrous roots that are
often reddish (otherwise white) and slightly fleshy. This sedge
reproduces by reseeding itself.
Cultivation:
The preference is
full sun, moist conditions, and exposed sandy soil. Most growth and
development occurs during the summer and early autumn. The seeds often
germinate in ground that has been exposed to flooded conditions during
the spring. The size of this flatsedge (Cyperus) can be highly
variable; mature flowering specimens can be as small as 3" (7.5 cm.) in
the field to as large as 3' (90 cm.) tall.
Range
&
Habitat: Red-rooted Flatsedge occurs
occasionally throughout Illinois (see
Distribution
Map),
where it is
native. This sedge is widely distributed in the eastern one-half of the
United States, and it also occurs in some areas of western United
States. Habitats include sandbars and mudbars along rivers, sandy banks
of rivers, exposed low shorelines along lakes and ponds, and ditches.
Disturbed areas with exposed sandy ground are highly preferred.
Faunal
Associations: Insects that feed on the foliage and other
parts of this
and other flatsedges (Cyperus spp.) include the larvae of such moths as
Bactra verutana (Javelin
Moth) and
Spodoptera
frugiperda (Fall Armyworm);
larvae of
Euphyes
vestris (Dun Skipper);
Sphenophorus aequalis
(Clay-colored Billbug) and other billbugs; larvae
of
Plantella
caudata (Sedge Gall Midge);
Ischnodemus rufipes (a
chinch bug);
Sipha
flava (Yellow Sugar Cane Aphid) and other aphids;
Pseudococcus
sorghiellus (Trochanter
Mealybug) and other mealybugs; see Frick & Wilson (1978),
Barlow
& Kuhar (2009), Wagner (2005), Majka et al. (2007), Vaurie
(1983),
Felt (1917), Hoffman (1996), Blackman & Eastop (2013), and
ScaleNet website (2014).
Because this plant can be very abundant in sandy areas along major
rivers and lakes, the seeds/spikelets of Red-rooted Flatsedge (Cyperus
erythrorhizos) are considered an important source of
food to many ducks, including the Northern Pintail, Green-winged Teal,
Blue-winged Teal, American Wigeon, and Northern Shoveler (Havera, 1999;
Anderson, 1959). Other wetland birds that feed on the seeds/spikelets
of flatsedges include the Bobolink, American Tree
Sparrow, Sora, Virginia Rail, and Wilson's Snipe (Martin et al.,
1951/1961). The culms of flatsedges are a minor source of food for
muskrats (Hamerstrom & Blake, 1939).
Photographic
Location:
The photographed plant was found in a sandy area along a river at Fox
Ridge State Park in Coles County, Illinois.
Comments:
Red-rooted
Flatsedge (Cyperus erythrorhizos) can be distinguished from other
similar sedges by its unusually short floral scales (1–1.5 mm.) that
have prominent green veins on their keels, while their lateral sides
become reddish brown during the blooming period. These scales appear
even smaller in size because they are partially overlapping, causing
the lateral sides of the linear floral spikelets to appear slightly
jagged. This flatsedge also produces very small distinctive achenes
that are between 0.5–1 mm. in length, 3-angled and ovoid in shape, and
pale-colored. Other flatsedges
(Cyperus spp.) in Illinois have longer floral scales and their achenes
tend to be longer and more dark-colored. Unlike similar flatsedges in
Illinois, the rachillas of the floral spikelets of Red-rooted Flatsedge
persist for a longer period of time after the floral scales and achenes
fall off. Another distinctive
difference, as the common name suggests, is that the fibrous roots of
this flatsedge are often red, rather than the more typical white.
Overall, Red-rooted
Flatsedge has a quite distinct and ornamental appearance, especially
during the blooming period.