There are about 150 species of
spikerushes worldwide, many aquatic, with about 2 dozen species native to Florida
(Wunderlin, 2003).
They may be encountered as floating tangled mats or dense clumps in the mud or as rooted green
spikes emersed from a few feet of water, covering many acres. Some are cultivated as
human food; some species are major food plants of birds and other animals.
Spikerushes are
sedges. Stems unbranched, many gas canals in cross section; leaf
blades none, just sheaths at the base of the stem; inflorescence a
single spikelet, on stem tips, no bracts; spikelets of various sizes, overlapping
scales, few-to-many flowers.