No key was found for the requested taxon, but its parent (Juncus) is keyed as shown below.

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Key to Juncaceae

Juncaceae

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© Scott Ward
1 Auricles lacerate, leaves with finely serrate margins (under 20× magnification)
(c) Thomas - CC-BY
1 Auricles entire or absent, leaves smooth or ciliate margins.
(c) Ward, Scott G
(c) Powell, Eric M - CC-BY-NC, permission granted to NCBG
  2 Leaf blades terete or flat, glabrous; mature fruit many-seeded; [often in wetlands]
(c) Ward, Scott G
  2 Leaf blades flat, ciliate; mature fruit with 3 seeds; [usually in uplands]
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Key C4: rooted aquatics with basal and simple, linear leaves

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1 Leaves thread-like or quill-like, about as thick as wide.
  2 Plants bulbous at base, and with the leaf bases expanded and containing sporangia; plant tufted or with very short rhizomes; [Lycophytes]
  2 Plants either somewhat bulbous or not at the base, the leaf-bases not containing sporangia; plant rhizomatous; [Pteridophytes, Eudicots, Monocots].
    3 New leaves unfurling with circinate vernation (a fiddlehead); plants reproducing by spores, from sporocarps on short stalks from the rhizome; [Pteridophytes]
    3 New leaves lacking circinate vernation; plants reproducing by flowers and seeds.
      4 Perianth differentiated, with either 3 sepals and 3 petals or 5 sepals and 5 petals; stamens either 7-many or stamens 4.
      4 Perianth undifferentiated, with 0, 3, or 6 tepals; stamens 1, 2, or 3; [Monocots].
          6 Gynoecium of 2 or more pistils, each pistil with 1 carpel and with 1 stigma
          6 Gynoecium of 1 pistil, each pistil with (2-) 3 carpels and (2-) 3 stigmas.
1 Leaves ribbon-like or strap-like, distinctly flattened (sometimes only near the tip of the leaf).
               8 Subterranean portions of plant bearing bladder-traps; flowers yellow or purple, bilaterally symmetrical
               8 Subterranean portions of plant lacking bladder traps; flowers white, green, gray, radially symmetrical (except bilaterally symmetrical in Glossostigma in PHRYMACEAE).
                 9 Leaves broadened towards the tip; [Monocots, Eudicots].
                     11 Leaves phyllodial, with obvious cross-partitions (septa); leaves alternate
                 9 Leaves parallel-margined or tapering towards the apex over much of their length; [Monocots].
                       12 Leaves tapering towards the apex over much of their length; plant either tufted and not rhizomatous, or short rhizomatous;.
                          13 Plant tufted, not rhizomatous; leaves spreading radially; inflorescence a tightly button-like head of very numerous small flowers, white, gray, tan, yellowish, or blackish; roots thickened, septate (not requiring magnification), unbranched
                          13 Planted short-rhizomatous; leaves distichous, equitant; inflorescence either a subglobular, ovoid, or cylindrical head, of spirally imbricate scales, or a diffuse corymb; roots not thickened, not septate, branched.
                            14 Inflorescence a subglobular, ovoid, or cylindrical head of spirally imbricate scales subtending individual flowers; rhizomes and roots not bright red
                       12 Leaves parallel-margined; plant usually rhizomatous.
                              15 Plants of marine habitats, growing submersed in salt water; [FL and the Gulf Coast of AL, MS, and LA]
                              15 Plants of freshwater or slightly to somewhat brackish habitats; [collectively widespread].
                                  17 Leaves lacking a distinct lacunar band along the midvein.