Cyperus gilesii
Cyperus gilesii, commonly known as Giles' flat-sedge, is a sedge of the Cyperaceae that is native to Australia.
Description
The annual or perennial sedge has a slender tufted habit. It has smooth trigonous or triquetrous shaped culms that are typically in height with a diameter of diameter.The septate to nodulose leaves are shorter than the culms and have a width of about. The sedge flowers in spring and summer producing simple inflorescences with one to five branches that have a length of around. The dense flower clusters are subdigitate with a hemispherical to globose shape and a diameter of around. There are one to three leaf-like involucral bracts. There are many flattened spikelets per cluster that have a length of and a width of containing 8 to 34 golden brown to red-brown flowers. After flowering a trigonous very narrow-ellipsoidally shaped red-brown to grey-brown nut forms that has a length of and a diameter.
Taxonomy
The species was first formally described by the botanist George Bentham in 1878 in the work Flora Australiensis.The specific epithet honours the explorer William [Ernest Powell Giles] who led five major expeditions throughout central Australia.