Common Name: Parish's flatsedge Duration: Perennial Nativity: Native Lifeform: Graminoid General: Tufted to solitary annual with three sided stem, 5-25 cm tall, 1-1.5 mm in diameter, glabrous. Vegetative: Basal leaves 3-5, sheaths firm, 1-3.5 cm long, pinkish to brownish, blades flat to involute, 1.5-3 mm wide, 3-20 cm long. Inflorescence: Loosely ovoid spikes 15-25 mm wide, with 1-6 rays, each 2-7 cm, subtending bracts 2-5, 3-20 cm, ascending; spikelets 5-30, linear, flattened, 6-22 mm long by 1.5-2 mm wide, floral scales deciduous, 8-12, red to reddish purple, or reddish brown, elliptic; achenes brown to dark purplish brown, broadly ellipsoid, a little over 1 mm long, with minutely punctate surfaces. Ecology: Found on stream banks, along desert washes and arroyos along with disturbed sites from 1,000-5,500 ft (305-1676 m); flowers August-October. Notes: Distinctive with the long ovoid spikes that dangle laxly at anthesis. Ethnobotany: Unknown Etymology: Cyperus is from the Greek word meaning sedge, while parishii is named for the brothers Samuel Bonsall Parish (1838-1928) and William Fletcher Parish (1840-1918) who collected widely in California. Synonyms: None Editor: SBuckley, 2010