Capitate Galingale

Cyperus capitatus

"Cyperus capitatus", known as capitate galingale or sand galingale is a species of sedge that is native to coasts of the Mediterranean and close by; it has no subspecies. It was first formally described by Domenico Vandelli in 1771.
Cyperus capitatus  Cyperus capitatus,Geotagged,Israel,Winter

Appearance

An unmistakable Cyperus growing in coastal sands, spreading by scaly undersand roots, with leaves mostly at the stem base, that are large, thick, blue-grey and U-shaped, and with bracts under the flowers resembling the leaves but with widened bases. The flowers form a single agglomerated head of spikelets, with the floret glumes large, broad, membraneous-edged, with conspicuous tip points.

Habitat

Mediterranean coastal sands, dunes and slacks and some coasts close by - Albania, Algeria, Baleares, Bulgaria, Canary Is., Cape Verde, Corse, Cyprus, East Aegean Is., Egypt, France, Greece, Italy, Kriti, Lebanon-Syria, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, North Caucasus, Palestine, Portugal, Sardegna, Sicilia, Sinai, Spain, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkey-in-Europe, Western Sahara, Yugoslavia.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassMonocots
OrderPoales
FamilyCyperaceae
GenusCyperus
SpeciesC. capitatus
Photographed in
Israel