RMCWG6N9–WHITE BEAK-SEDGE Rhynchospora alba (Cyperaceae)
RM2RD6JN9–Starrush whitetop, white star sedge, white-topped sedge, Rhynchospora colorata Dancing Star, evergreen grasslike perennial sedge with white bracts
RF2E1J7GY–Rhynchospora alba, known as the white beaksedge, wild bog plant from Finland
RMHGJ3W3–Brown beak-sedge (Rhynchospora fusca), a rare plant of wet heathland and bog, on a Dorset heath, UK
RFC3H3RY–White Beak-sedge, rhynchospora alba
RMDXRNK2–Grass-star or Star-grass , Rhynchospora nervosa, Trinidad
RFTRP4G6–Starrush whitetop a.k.a. white star sedge (Rhynchospora colorata) closeup - Topeekeegee Yugnee (TY) Park, Hollywood, Florida, USA
RF2T8HNTD–Close up of a Brown Beaksedge, Rhynchospora fusca, in a vast Drenthe Dutch landscape with sand quarry and lake against a background of forest and dark
RF2RD2C8Y–White beak-sedge
RMP88P9T–Vennen omgeving van Rheinsberg, Fens near Rheinsberg
RMP8JJMJ–close-up of flowering White Beak-sedge
RFEHD3MD–rhynchospora alba
RF2D4JHRY–Purple heather flowers and white beak-sedge fruits growing in swamp and illuminated by setting sun on a bokeh background.
RMW7YTCB–White beak-sedge (Rhynchospora alba) clump flowering in a boggy pool, Stoborough Heath, Dorset, UK, July.
RMWA7G02–Star grass (Rhynchospora colorata). Known as Pond plant, Starrush whitetop, White-topped sedge and White star sedge also. Another scientific name is
RF2DBRPT2–Star grass (Rhynchospora colorata). Called Pond plant, Starrush whitetop, White-topped sedge and White star sedge also. Another scientific name is Di
RM2AN0GK7–RHYNCHOSPORA LATIFOLIA GRASS CYPERACEAE
RF2E59X0G–Rhynchospora alba, known as the white beaksedge, wild bog plant from Finland
RF2CBY4TR–Starrush Whitetop or Star Sedge (Rhynchospora colorata)
RFK5TJF7–Blooming Heathers (Calluna vulgaris) and White beak-sedge (Rhynchospora alba), Emsland, Lower Saxony, Germany
RM2RJXFRB–Sanitz, Germany. 31st July, 2023. White beaked reed (Rhynchospora alba) grows on the new peat layer in Teufelsmoor, southeast of Rostock. Until 1990, peat was extracted here on a large scale. After the designation as a protected area, the restoration of the moor began, areas were put under water again and drainage ditches were closed. In the meantime, the moor is growing again and forms about one centimeter of new peat per year. Credit: Jens Büttner/dpa/Alamy Live News
RM2BTPY8R–Rhynchospora microcephala Britton Britton ex Small.
RFT5T0T1–This pictures showing a rhynchospora. The stem is very thin and long, leaves are small and pointy this is from Cyperaceae family, vintage line drawing
RM2C1B28K–Rhynchospora albomarginata Kk Rhynchospora albomarginata Kk.
RF2GF799E–White beak sedge (Rhynchospora alba), plant stand in flower, Esterweger Dose, Lower Saxony, Germany
RMFW8666–Dark blue slightly wavy water amidst the great conservation area Ewiges Meer in East Frisia, 4 December 2015
RM2A2RRTE–Brown Moorsimse and Narrow-leaved Cottongrass, A: Rhynchospora fusca - Brown Moorsimple, B and C: Eriophorum angustifolium Roth - Narrow-leaved Cotton Grass, Family: 25. Cyperaceae - Ried grasses, Plate 102, after p. 252 (Vol. 1), 1886, Otto Wilhelm Thomé: Prof. Dr. Thomé's Flora von Deutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz in Wort und Bild. Gera-Untermhaus: Verlag von Fr. Eugen Köhler, [1886
RMBKH8XA–Bruine snavelbies groeit in groepjes bij elkaar; Brown beaksedge
RMP902N7–. 338 Illustration Rhynchospora fusca0
RMKBY04T–426 Rhynchospora alba, R. fusca
RM2BKXHKR–Illustration Rhynchospora fusca0.
RMKY8XR2–Rhynchospora alba — Flora Batava — Volume v8
RM2HD09AE–Rhynchospora spp Sturm20.
RMJ996T6–Rhynchospora spp Sturm20
RM2HD09AX–Rhynchospora colorata NRCS-001.
RM2F4WWAC–White beak breads (Rhynchospora Alba)
RFE5E5PE–left: white beak-sedge, Rhynchospora alba, right: brown beak-sedge, Rhynchospora fusca
RMMKN9K5–Brown Beak-Rush
RM2AXE24C–Text-book of structural and physiological botany . ing rhizome of Carex (greatly reduced). pales usually occurring in each flower ; and then the inner one is eitheradherent to the rachis, or, as in Cai^ex, is transformed into a sheathingbag or utricle enclosing the flower. Thegenera with hermaphrodite flowers areeither entirely destitute of a perianth, asCyperus (Fig. 466) and Cladiuin, or it iscomposed of bristles, either few in number,as in Scirpus .2<xA Rhynchospora, or in largenumbers, and in that case forming a tuft ofhairs closely resembling cotton-wool spring-ing from the infloresce