Rhizomes 0.6-1.8 mm thick, shoots often arising 2-several per cluster, many nodes without shoots. Culms bluntly trigonous, (6-)10-35 cm, smooth-angled distally. Leaves: basal sheaths grayish brown to dark brown, shredding into fibers; sheaths with hyaline inner band, apex not prolonged beyond base of blade; ligules 0-0.8 mm, glabrous; blades 0.6-1.8 mm wide. Inflorescences 0.7-2 cm, 1/2+ as wide as long (if pistillate); spikes 3-8, androgynous, ovoid. Pistillate scales dark reddish brown, with hyaline margins, broadly ovate, 2.4-4.1 mm, apex acute to acuminate, shiny. Anthers 1.4-3 mm, apiculus smooth to warty, very short and broad (30X). Perigynia dark reddish brown, essentially veinless, ± stipitate, broadly ovate to nearly orbicular, thickly plano-convex, 2.4-3.9 × 1.5-2.1 mm, shiny; beak 0.3-0.9 mm, hyaline, weakly bidentulate or oblique.
Carex duriuscula belongs to a difficult complex of temperate dry grassland species, and the North American plants are recognized here as conspecific with the Asian Carex duriuscula, following T. V. Egorova (1999). Compared to the Asian plants, the North American plants usually are taller [5-12(-20) versus (6-)10-35 cm] and the perigynia are larger [2.5-3(-3.2) versus 2.4-3.9 mm] (T. V. Egorova 1999). More work is still needed here. North American plants have often been treated as a variety or subspecies of the Eurasian C. stenophylla, which is quite different in having larger perigynia that are distinctly veined adaxially.
The species is sporadically introduced along roads and in railway yards east of its native range.
Stems 0.5-2 dm, smooth, scattered on long, slender, brownish, sympodial rhizomes; lvs basally disposed, 0.3-1.5 mm wide, often involute or canaliculate; spikes sessile, normally androgynous, inconspicuously bracteate, 4-9 mm, closely aggregated into an ovoid or oblong- cylindric head 8-17 mm; perigynia fusiform-elliptic to broadly elliptic-ovate, 2.6-3.3(-3.5) mm, planoconvex, sharp-edged and ±serrulate distally, ±evidently several-nerved dorsally and sometimes also ventrally, or virtually nerveless, with an evident beak 0.5-1 mm; achene lenticular. Open, often grassy places; irregularly circumboreal, in Amer. from Minn., Io., and Kans. w. across the plains and irregularly in the cordillera n. to Alas.; intr. along railways in Mo. and Ill. (C. eleocharis, the Amer. pls)
Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.