Carex juniperorum

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Cedar barren type environment in which C. juniperorum occurs. CedarBarrens.jpg
Cedar barren type environment in which C. juniperorum occurs.

Carex juniperorum
Status TNC G3.svg
Vulnerable  (NatureServe)
Scientific classification Red Pencil Icon.png
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Clade: Commelinids
Order: Poales
Family: Cyperaceae
Genus: Carex
Species:
C. juniperorum
Binomial name
Carex juniperorum
Catling  [ species ], Reznicek  [ Wikidata ] & Crins 1993 [1]

Carex juniperorum, the juniper sedge, is a perennial flowering plant native to North America, first described by botanist William J. Crins in 1993. [2] C. juniperorum is in the Cyperaceae (sedge) family, and is closely related to C. jamesii and C. willdenowii . It is commonly called juniper sedge as it is often seen growing in areas with red cedar ( Juniperus virginiana ), though the presence of cedar is not necessarily a requirement for it to grow. [3]

Contents

Distribution

Juniper sedge is globally rare. It only occurs in sections of Ohio, Kentucky, and Virginia in the United States. In Canada, it is found in the province of Ontario. [4] [5] [6]

Description and habitat

Juniper sedge prefers dry, open, calcareous soils that are periodically disturbed to maintain canopy cover. [7] [8] The plant grows forming a clump, with grass-like leaves up to 30cm long with a reddish-brown basal sheath. Flowers occur in early may on a small basal spike. Small (1.5-2mm) ellipsoid perigynia form in late May lasting until late June. [9]

Risks

Cyperus juniperorum faces habitat risk from fire suppression, invasive plant succession, development and habitat fragmentation. the sedge requires open habitat to grow and through fire suppression, land use changes, and increased invasive plant presence such as Alianthus altissima have threatened existing populations. [10] To ensure the survival of the species proper land management techniques must be implemented to keep existing habitat clear of secondary growth that may outcompete juniper sedge.


Related Research Articles

<i>Carex</i> Genus of flowering plants in the sedge family Cyperaceae

Carex is a vast genus of more than 2,000 species of grass-like plants in the family Cyperaceae, commonly known as sedges. Other members of the family Cyperaceae are also called sedges, however those of genus Carex may be called true sedges, and it is the most species-rich genus in the family. The study of Carex is known as caricology.

<i>Carex jamesii</i> Species of grass-like plant

Carex jamesii, known as James's sedge or grass sedge, is a species of sedge native to North America from Minnesota east to New York and south to Oklahoma and South Carolina. It occurs in mesic hardwood forests and produces fruits from early May to mid July. It has two to four perigynia that are subtended by leaf-like pistillate scales. Its seeds are dispersed by ants.

<i>Carex chordorrhiza</i> Species of grass-like plant

Carex chordorrhiza, commonly called creeping sedge or string sedge, is a species of perennial plant in the family Cyperaceae with Holarctic distribution growing in acidic bogs.

<i>Carex lutea</i> Species of grass-like plant

Carex lutea is a rare species of sedge known by the common names golden sedge and sulphur sedge. It is endemic to North Carolina, where it is known only from Pender and Onslow Counties in the Cape Fear River watershed. There are nine populations. The plant was discovered in 1991 and described to science as a new species in 1994, and it has not been thoroughly studied nor completely surveyed yet. Its rarity was obvious by 2002, however, when it was federally listed as an endangered species.

<i>Carex sect. Spirostachyae</i>

Carex sect. Spirostachyae is a section of the genus Carex, containing 38 species of sedge. Species in Carex sect. Spirostachyae share a suite of features, including the short internodes of the primary rhizomes, the presence of an antiligule, the leaf-like, sheathing bract at the base of the inflorescence, the presence of three stigmas in female flowers, and the shape of the seeds.

<i>Carex bigelowii</i> Species of grass-like plant

Carex bigelowii is a species of sedge known by the common names Bigelow's sedge, Gwanmo sedge, and stiff sedge. It has an Arctic–alpine distribution in Eurasia and North America, and grows up to 50 centimetres (20 in) tall in a variety of habitats.

<i>Carex roanensis</i> Species of grass-like plant

Carex roanensis is a species of sedge known by the common name Roan Mountain sedge. It is native to North America, where it can be found in the southern Appalachian Mountains. It was first collected on Roan Mountain in Tennessee in 1936. It was not collected again for fifty years. Now it is known from Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia.

<i>Carex rufina</i> Species of grass-like plant

Carex rufina is a species of sedge known by the common name snowbed sedge. It is native to Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Greenland, and northeastern Canada.

Carex aboriginum is a species of sedge endemic to Idaho in the western United States, known as Indian Valley sedge. It was not observed in the wild between 1910, when it was first described, and 1999. Until its rediscovery, C. aboriginum was considered the only plant native to Idaho to have become extinct, and it remains one of the state's rarest and most endangered plant species.

<i>Carex lacustris</i> Species of grass-like plant

Carex lacustris, known as lake sedge, is a tufted grass-like perennial of the sedge family (Cyperaceae), native to southern Canada and the northern United States. C. lacustris us an herbaceous surface-piercing plant that grows in water up to 50 cm (1.6 ft) deep, and grows 50–150 cm (1.6–4.9 ft) tall. It grows well in marshes and swampy woods of the boreal forest, along river and lake shores, in ditches, marshes, swamps, and other wetland habitat. It grows on muck, sedge peat, wet sand or silt, in filtered or full sunlight.

<i>Carex subg. Vignea</i>

Carex subg. Vignea is a subgenus of the sedge genus Carex, containing around 300 of the 2000 species in the genus. Its members are characterised by having bisexual, sessile spikes, where the female flowers have two stigmas each.

Carex hirtifolia, the pubescent sedge, is a species of sedge native to northeastern North America. It is the only species in Carex section Hirtifoliae. The entire plant is distinctively covered soft hairs.

<i>Carex kobomugi</i> Species of grass-like plant

Carex kobomugi is a species of sedge, known as the Japanese sedge or Asiatic sand sedge, that lives in sandy coastal areas of eastern Asia, and has become an invasive species in the north-eastern United States.

<i>Carex rosea</i> Species of grass-like plant

Carex rosea, the rosy sedge, is a flowering plant and part of the family Cyperaceae. Synonyms for Carex rosea include Carex concoluta, and Carex flaccidula. It is native to central and eastern North America and it exists in wet to dry soils. Carex rosea can be found in shores of streams and bottomlands, as well as ponds. It is known to have great adaptations to dry-shade locations. This is an evergreen, easy-to-grow-plant.

<i>Carex brevior</i> Species of grass-like plant

Carex brevior, known as shortbeak sedge and plains oval sedge, is a species of sedge native to North America. The specific epithet brevior means "shorter" in Latin.

<i>Carex viridula</i> Species of grass-like plant

Carex viridula, known as little green sedge, green sedge, or greenish sedge, is a small flowering plant native to North America, Europe, Asia, and Morocco.

Carex arctogena is a member of the sedge family (Cyperaceae) which grows in high alpine areas. It is one of the few "bipolar" species; it has populations in Greenland, Scandinavia, Russia, Canada and southern South America. Plants in the far north and south appear to be genetically identical, having taken advantage of a similar niches on opposite ends of the globe.

Peter William Ball is an English-born botanist, plant collector, and plant taxonomist, specializing in caricology.

William "Bill" J. Crins is a botanist, naturalist, and ecologist.

<i>Carex remota</i> Species of plant in the genus Carex

Carex remota, the remote sedge, is a species in the genus Carex, native to Europe, the Atlas Mountains in Africa, and western Asia. It is a riparian forest specialist. It is known as one of the most frequently hybridizing species of Carex, forming hybrids with C. appropinquata, C. arenaria, C. brizoides, C. canescens, C. divulsa, C. echinata, C. elongata, C. otrubae, C. ovalis, C. paniculata, and C. spicata.

References


  1. Catling, Paul Miles; Reznicek, Anton Albert; & Crins, William J., Systematic Botany; Quarterly Journal of the American Society of Plant Taxonomists/ 18: 497, fig. 1
  2. Catling, P.M., A.A. Reznicek, and W.J. Crins. 1993. Carex juniperorum (Cyperaceae), a new species from northeastern North America, with a key to Carex sect. Phyllostachys. Systematic Botany 18(3): 496-501.
  3. Catling, P.M., A.A. Reznicek, and W.J. Crins. 1993. Carex juniperorum (Cyperaceae), a new species from northeastern North America, with a key to Carex sect. Phyllostachys. Systematic Botany 18(3): 496-501.
  4. Wayne National Forest. 2003. Species data collection form, Carex juniperorum (June 4, 2003, updated September 30, 2003).
  5. Division of Natural Areas and Preserves. 2001. Rare native Ohio plants, 2000-2001 status list (20 October 2002). Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Ohio.
  6. Belden, A., Jr., G.R. Fleming, J.C. Ludwig, J.F. Townsend, N.E. Van Alstine, and T.F. Wieboldt. 2004. Noteworthy collections: Virginia. Castanea 69: 144-153.
  7. Anderson, Roger C., James S. Fralish, and Jerry M. Baskin. Savannas, barrens, and rock outcrop plant communities of North America. Cambridge, UK New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press, 1999. Print.
  8. Polgar, S.K. 2008. Prioritizing Management of Ailanthus altissima at the Edge of Appalachia Preserve. Electronic Masters Thesis. Document number: ohiou1198354827. Ohio University
  9. Catling, P.M., A.A. Reznicek, and W.J. Crins. 1993. Carex juniperorum (Cyperaceae), a new species from northeastern North America, with a key to Carex sect. Phyllostachys. Systematic Botany 18(3): 496-501.
  10. Polgar, S.K. 2008. Prioritizing Management of Ailanthus altissima at the Edge of Appalachia Preserve. Electronic Masters Thesis. Document number: ohiou1198354827. Ohio University