Fotos / Sonidos

Observ.

rcurtis

Fecha

Febrero 7, 2016 a las 04:50 TARDE EST

Fotos / Sonidos

Observ.

tcurtis

Fecha

Mayo 2021

Lugar

Ohio, US (Google, OSM)

Descripción

I finally came to the realization that a lot of the sedges I have been seeing here in Portage County that belong to the section laxiflorae are indeed Carex leptonervia. I had previously assigned these specimens to Carex blanda, but noticed that what I was calling C. blanda was quite variable, and some of that variability coorelated with habitat type and quality. In fact, I don’t think many keys do these species justice in there differences. C. leptonervia is a sedge of higher quality habitat. It is generally a little lengthier, thinner, and ‘greener,’ and the perigynia are different. But let me be clear, in spite of the name, the perigynia of C. leptonervia are not nerveless, but the nerves are less frequent around the perigynia than in other laxiflorae species. They also (the nerves) seem to be less dimorphic than in other laxiflorae species of which have prominent nerves roughly opposite from one another, and then have many more faint nerves running length wise between them, while in C. leptonervia, the less prominent nerves are just barely so. I also noticed that the carpellate scales are generally shorter in C. leptonervia than in C. blanda, but this may not be consistent as I have not seen this characteristic represented in any key.

Hope this description helps those who may be struggling with these species like I did.

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Encino de Piedra (Quercus muehlenbergii)

Observ.

flosi

Fecha

Septiembre 1, 2018 a las 10:32 MAÑANA EDT

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Encino de Piedra (Quercus muehlenbergii)

Observ.

keithkutsko

Fecha

Octubre 21, 2019 a las 11:14 TARDE EDT

Descripción

Thanks to flosi for finding these, they're way at the back border of the park, no acorns this year

Added acorn 10-5-2020 (one of the few the squirrels didn't already eat)