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FamilyScientific Name Common NameHabitatDistributionImage
CyperaceaeEleocharis acicularisNeedle SpikerushDrawdown shores of lakes, ponds, and rivers, marshes, ditches.Greenland, NL (Newfoundland), NU, and AK south to GA, TX, CA; Mexico, Central America, n. South America, Eurasia.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis acutangula ssp. brevisetaDepressional wetlands.S. FL. Native of West Indies (Cuba, Dominican Republic); Central America (Panama); South America; also s. Africa (where probably introduced).image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis aestuumTidal SpikerushFreshwater tidal rivers.ME south to DE, PA, and NJ. See MCAvoy (2021) for details about DE occurrence.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis albidaWhite SpikerushBrackish tidal marshes, interdune swales and ponds.MD south to s. FL, west to TX and n. Mexico (NLE, TAM); Bermuda.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis ambigensBrackish tidal marshes.MA south to n. FL, west to TX.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis angusticepsSandy banks of creeks, in uppermost marsh areas and edges of maritime marsh hammocks dominated by Quercus virginiana, Juniperus silicicola, and Sabal palmetto.So far as is known, endemic to coastal GA (Camden County).
CyperaceaeEleocharis atropurpureaPurple SpikerushClay-based Carolina bays, other pineland ponds, disturbed wetlands.Widely scattered in North America; Mexico, West Indies, Central America, South America, Asia, Africa.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis baldwiniiBaldwin’s SpikerushBogs, pools, acid impoundment shores. Often growing in dense mats in very wet, saturated sandy firelanes or disklines in fire-managed habitats or other somewhat-disturbed wet, acidic, sandy habitats.VA south to FL, west to AR and TX.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis bicolorMoist sites, wet pine savannas.AL and GA west to LA; West Indies; Nicaragua.
CyperaceaeEleocharis bifidaCedar Glade SpikerushSeasonally wet seepage in limestone glades.KY and w. VA south through TN to nw. GA and n. AL. Known from a single collection in VA (Rockbridge County); and otherwise primarily occurs in KY and TN and adjacent areas of surrounding states.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis brachycarpaWet soils, resaca edges.S. TX (where last seen in 1834) and TAM (last seen in 1959(.
CyperaceaeEleocharis brittoniiBogs, pine savannas.NC south to FL, west to TX, north in the interior to TN and MO; disjunct in DE and s. NJ.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis cellulosaGulf Coast SpikerushFresh to brackish interdune swale ponds on barrier islands, marl prairies, depression ponds, salt marshes, other disturbed wet sandy habitats.E. NC south to s. FL, west to TX and Mexico; West Indies; Bermuda; Central America (Nicaragua).image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis compressa var. acutisquamataCalcareous (dolostone and limestone) glades and fens.IL, MN, AB, and SK south to IL, MO, TX, and NM.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis compressa var. compressaFlattened SpikerushLimestone or mafic glades and barrens, riverside scours.QC, MN, SD, and CO south to VA, nc. NC, nw. GA, AL, MS, AR, and KS. See Ungberg (2022) for discussion of its occurrence in NC.
CyperaceaeEleocharis confervoidesWebsteriaSubmersed or floating in lakes and ponds.AL, GA, and FL; West Indies; Central and South America; Asia; Africa; n. Australia.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis cylindricaCylinder SpikerushEphemeral pools.Widely scattered in TX and KS.
CyperaceaeEleocharis dulcisChinese Water-chestnutimage of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis elegansElegant SpikerushSwamp forests, pastures, stream beds.Peninsular FL (Hardee and Hillsborough counties); West Indies; Mexico and Central America south to South America. See Brunton, Campbell, & Reznicek (2018) for a detailed discussion of the species' occurrence in FL.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis ellipticaElliptic SpikerushCalcareous prairies, fens, shores, riverside scours.NL (Labrador) west to BC, south to PA, NJ, WV, TN, MO, IA, and ID. Reported for fen habitats in the Ozark portion of MO (J. Thomas, pers. comm., 2020).image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis elongataQuiet waters of limesink (doline) ponds, Everglades sawgrass sloughs.Se. NC south to FL, west to s. AL, s. MS, and TX (Sorrie & Leonard 1999); Jamaica; Mexico, Central America, South America.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis engelmanniiEngelmann’s SpikerushFreshwater shores, marshes, disturbed wet places.MA, ON, and BC south to GA, MS (Sorrie & LeBlond 2008), TX, and CA.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis equisetoidesHorsetail SpikerushQuiet waters of limesink (doline) ponds, natural lakes, borrow pits, ditches, artificial millponds.MA south to c. peninsular FL, west to se. TX, AR, s. MO, and se. OK; also near the Great Lakes from NY west to MI, MO. Reported for OK (Buthod & Hoagland 2017).image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis erythropodaBald SpikerushStreambanks, marshes, ponds, swamps. Often in circumneutral or higher pH soils.NS and AK south to NC, MS, TX, AZ, and OR.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis fallaxCreeping SpikerushTidal marshes and swamps, interdune swales.Nova Scotia to NJ; disjunct in e. NC.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis flavescens var. flavescensPale Spikerush, Yellow SpikerushCoastal Plain ponds, pools.DE south to s. FL, west to TX; West Indies; South America.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis geniculataMarshes, moist disturbed areas.Widespread but scattered across much of the United States; West Indies, Central America, South America, Asia, Africa.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis intermediaMatted SpikerushCalcareous fens and seepage areas, wet disturbed areas over calcareous rocks.NS west to MN, south to VA, TN, and IL.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis interstinctaKnotted SpikerushPonds, lakes, borrow pits, canals.S. AL and Panhandle FL south to s. FL and west (interruptedly) to OK and TX; Bahamas and West Indies; Mexico, Central America, e. South America.
CyperaceaeEleocharis lanceolataOzark SpikerushWet areas, open disturbed areas, banks of creeks, along pond or lake margins, ditches, roadsides, glades, mesic forests.MO and KS south to MS (J.R. Rigby, pers.comm. 2020), LA, and TX; disjunct in c. TN (Montgomery Co., Western Highland Rim).image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis macrostachyaLarge SpikerushWet ditches, marshes, shorelines.QC to AK south to WV, AL, MS, TX, CA, and Mexico; South America. Mapping is especially conjectural.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis melanocarpaBlack-fruited SpikerushCoastal Plain ponds, cypress meadows, sinkhole ponds in the Shenandoah Valley.MA south to n. peninsular FL, west to e. TX; disjunct in s. MI and n. IN (Sorrie & Leonard 1999).image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis microcarpa var. filiculmisTorrey’s SpikerushBogs, wet pine savannas.MA and MI south to FL west to TX.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis microcarpa var. microcarpaWet pine savannas, Coastal Plain bogs.SC south to FL, west to LA; West Indies.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis minimaSmall SpikerushPond margins, lakeshores, shallow water, wet depressions.GA and FL west to TX; West Indies, Mexico, Central America, South America, Asia, Australia (FNA).image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis montanaPonds, swales, wet ditches, floodplain forests.FL and se. and sw. GA west to TX, south to Mexico, Central America, and South America; West Indies.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis montevidensisSand SpikerushMaritime wet grasslands, ponds, swales, ditches.E. NC south to FL, west to TX and CA; Mexico, South America.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis mutataDepressional wetlands.S. FL; se. TX; Mexico; South America; West Indies (including the Bahamas); w. Africa. Reported for s. FL (Broward County) in a situation where its native / non-native status is uncertain and indeterminable (Angelo, Rosen, & Lange 2020).
CyperaceaeEleocharis nanaDwarf SpikerushPond margins.FL Panhandle and peninsula; South America.
CyperaceaeEleocharis nigrescensPond margins, pine flatwoods.Se. NC (historical), SC to FL; West Indies, Mexico; South America; Africa. The native status of this species in the southeastern coastal plain is uncertain. The earliest collection that can be confirmed in FL was not until the 1940's (Ward and Leigh 1975); however, a single collection near Wilmington, NC predated this by more than 70 years (Canby s.n.; October 1867). While often present in disturbed wet ditches and similar habitats, it can also occur in relatively intact wet flatwoods, further complicating our understanding of its historical and current nativity.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis obtusaBlunt SpikerushDitches, marshes, disturbed wet areas.NS west to BC, south to FL, TX, and CA.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis obtusetrigonaDitches.Se. and s. TX; ne. Mexico (TAM, VER), Central America (Nicaragua); South America.
CyperaceaeEleocharis occultaOccult SpikerushSeeps over limestone or other calcareous substrate.S. OK south to c. TX.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis olivacea var. olivaceaOlive SpikerushCoastal Plain ponds, pools, other wet, sandy or peaty habitats.NS west to MN, south to FL and TX.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis olivacea var. reductisetaTidal rivers draining from the NJ pine barrens. On sand, gravel, or mud-covered sands of freshwater to slightly brackish intertidal zones of rivers.Endemic to s. NJ (as far as is known).
CyperaceaeEleocharis ovataFreshwater drying shores, lake and stream beds, bogs, tidal estuarine shores, disturbed areas.NL (Labrador), ON, and MN south to NJ, MD, DE, PA, VA, KY, MO, and OK; scattered in w. United States. Also known from one collection in MS (see comments below). Reported for VA in FNA; documentation needing verification.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis palustrisCommon Spikerush, Small's SpikerushMarshes.NL (Labrador) west to AK, south to FL, TX, CA, and Mexico; Eurasia.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis parvulaDwarf Spikerush, Small SpikerushTidal brackish and freshwater marshes, inland salt marshes, shallow waters of managed impoundments.NS, NL (Newfoundland), and MI south to c. peninsular FL and LA; BC south to CA; Mexico, Central America, South America, Eurasia, Africa. Reported for s. IN by Bill Thomas (pers.comm., 2022).image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis quadrangulataSquarestem SpikerushPools, marshes.MA west to ON and MI, south to n. FL and TX.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis quinquefloraFens, meadows, and seeps.NL and AK south to NJ, PA, OH, IN, IL, NE, NM, AZ, and CA; Eurasia.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis radicansRooting SpikerushInterdune ponds, seeps, bogs.Widely scattered in North America; n. Mexico, West Indies, Central America, South America.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis raveneliiRio Grande SpikerushSeasonal wetlands, ditches.S. TX.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis retroflexaMoist areas.S. AL (probably a ballast waif, collected in Mobile and Baldwin counties by Mohr in 1896); Mexico, West Indies, Central America, South America, tropical Asia, Australia. More populations could be found (or redetermined) from the Gulf Coastal Plain.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis reverchoniiReverchon's SpikerushOpen wet areas.Endemic to TX.
CyperaceaeEleocharis robbinsiiRobbins’s SpikerushQuiet waters of limesink (doline) ponds, natural lakes, millponds and semipermanent impoundments.NS and NB west to ON, south to s. MS (Sorrie & Leonard 1999); also near the Great Lakes, from NY west to IN, WI, and MN.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis rostellataBeaked SpikerushBrackish and freshwater tidal marshes, sea-level fens; saline soils inland. Calcareous fens northward.ME, ON, and BC south to FL, TX, CA, and Mexico; West Indies. Reported for WV (Harmon, Ford-Werntz, & Grafton 2006).image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis tenuis var. pseudopteraBogs, seepages, margins of wooded swamps.NS, QC and IN south to NC and nw. GA; disjunct in s. IL.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis tenuis var. tenuisSlender Spikerush, Kill-cowBogs, marshes.NS and QC south to NC and s. AL.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis tortilisTwisted SpikerushWet pine savannas, Coastal Plain seepage bogs, seeps, pocosin ecotones. In Coastal Plain-like seepages in the Ridge and Valley province, and rarely in high elevation mixed herbaceous and swamp seepage habitats in the mountains.NJ south to FL, west to TX, inland to sw. NC, ne. GA, w. TN, and AR. recently discovered in Rabun County, GA (Melanie Flood, pers. comm., 2022) in a high elevation (ca. 1700 ft) seepage with Acer rubrum and Platanthera clavellata. It is generally uncommon to rare outside of the Coastal Plain.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis tricostataThree-angle SpikerushWet pine savannas, natural depression ponds, clay-based Carolina bays.MA, NY, and MI south to FL, AL, and MS.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis tuberculosaLarge-tubercled SpikerushBogs, savannas, acidic seeps, ditches.NS south to FL, west to TX.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis uniglumisBrackish marshes.NL (Newfoundland) to NC, along the coast; as interpreted broadly (including E. halophila) E. uniglumis also occurs in Eurasia.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis verrucosaBogs and seeps.NJ, PA, WI, and s. SD south to GA, a. AL, s. MS, s. LA, and se. TX.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis viviparaViviparous SpikerushCoastal Plain ponds, small depression ponds, semipermanent impoundment ponds, beaver ponds.NC south to FL, west to TX. Apparently disjunct in Cherokee (Whetstone 15348, JSU) and Jackson (K.R. Brodeur 2123, JSU) counties, Alabama. The latter specimen contains ovoid spikelets with spiraled scales, which matches this species; however, I have not seen achenes to confirm if the surfaces are honeycomb-reticulate (Ward, personal observation). Otherwise, this species occurs almost exclusively in the southeastern coastal plain, particularly in coastal plain ponds. The disjunct inland records should be investigated further.image of plant
CyperaceaeEleocharis wolfiiWolf’s SpikerushOak flatwoods, shallow ephemeral pools on granitic flatrocks, prairies.OH, WI, MN, and ND south to GA, AL, TN, LA, and TX. Known from two counties in VA (Fairfax, Pittsylvania) and from a single record in Cabarrus County, NC. Both areas of the mid-Atlantic represent disjunctions of a more midwesterly-distributed species.image of plant

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