| Longistylis: Answers
to key questions in Rushes, Bulrushes & Pondweeds plus the remaining
Monocots of Saskatchewan by V. L. Harms, A. L. Leighton, and M. A. Vetter
leading to this species. The answers are in the order you would
normally work through the key.
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Tepals not
subtended by a pair of bracteoles; flowers borne in tight clusters of 2
-100 (sometimes 1-flowered in J. stygius var. americanus),
these clusters (glomerules) subtended by small bracts; leaf blades
septate (in most species) or not. NOT [Tepals subtended by a pair
of floral bracteoles immediately below the flower; flowers borne singly
in the inflorescence either +/- evenly distributed or +/- grouped in
loose clusters (not in tight clusters, and if grouped in clusters
individual flowers and paired floral bracteoles are still visible and
not so tightly crowded such that individual flowers cannot be fairly
easily identified); leaf blades, if present, not septate.] |
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Leaf
blades terete or +/-canaliculate or +/- flattened dorsiventrally (not
flattened laterally or equitant), usually < 3 mm wide. NOT
[Leaf blades flattened laterally (folded lengthwise), ensiform and
equitant, 1.5 - 6 mm wide.] |
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Primary
bracts distinctly white-scarious and conspicuously inflated at the base,
apices narrowly attenuate to caudate; tepals with wide (>= one-third
width of tepals) scarious margins; anthers 2 - 3 times longer than
filaments; styles 0.6 - 0.9 (1.2) mm long; capsules 3-locular with (0.5)
0.6 - 1.0 (1.1) mm long mucros; leaf blades +/- canaliculate, not
septate. NOT [Primary bracts not distinctly white-scarious, may be
somewhat but not broadly inflated at base, apices obtuse to acute;
tepals with margins narrower, to one-third width of tepals, indistinct
or membranous or scarious; anthers much shorter to 2 times longer than
filaments; styles of various lengths; capsules variously locular with
mucros to 0.5 mm (0.5 - 0.7 mm in J. castaneus) or gradually
tapering into long narrow beaks; leaf blades terete or subterete
(laterally flattened to subterete in J. nevadensis) or
canaliculate (J. castaneus, which is recorded only from the ne
corner of the province), septate or indistinctly septate.] |
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