Cymophyllus

Mackenzie

in N. L. Britton and A. Brown, Ill. Fl. N. U.S. ed. 2, 1: 441. 1913.

Etymology: Greek kyma, wave, and phyll, leaf, in reference to the undulate-margined leaves
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 23. Treatment on page 573. Mentioned on page 3, 5, 255, 257.

Herbs, perennial, cespitose, evergreen. Culms compressed or terete. Leaves basal, bladeless; proximal sheaths 4–6, whitish to straw colored, disintegrating at maturity, distal 1(–2, rarely), blade flat, formed from open, elongated sheath, without ligule or evident midvein, usually 2–5 cm wide. Inflorescences terminal, single spike; bracts spirally arranged, each subtending flower, scalelike. Spikelets 1-flowered; scales 0–1. Flowers unisexual; staminate flowers without scales; pistillate flowers with 1 scale enclosing flower (perigynium), open only at apex; perianth absent; stamens 3; styles deciduous, linear, 3-fid. Achenes sharply trigonous.

Distribution

e North America.

Discussion

Species 1.