Rhizomes 2-5 mm diam. Culms sharply trigonous, sides deeply concave throughout to rarely nearly flat, 0.4-2.5 m × 3-10 mm. Leaves ca. 3, basal, less than 1/2 culm length; sheath fronts not pinnate-fibrillose; blades 1-3, V-shaped near base, otherwise laterally flattened-trigonous in cross section; distal blade 0.2-1.5 times as long as sheath, 25-200 × 2-8 mm. Inflorescences capitate or very rarely with 1 branch to 5 mm; proximal bract usually erect, resembling leaf blade, 1-6 cm. Spikelets 2-20, 5-15 × 3-5 mm; scales bright orange- to red- or purple-brown to straw-colored, often partly translucent, usually clearly lineolate-spotted, broadly ovate, 2.7-4 × 2-3 mm, smooth or awn sparsely spinulose, margins deciduously ciliolate, flanks of proximal scale often with several ribs, apex rounded to acute, notch 0.1-0.4 mm deep, awn not contorted, 0.2-0.6 mm. Flowers: perianth members (2-)5-6(-7), yellow-brown, bristlelike, slender to stout, often unequal to equaling 1/2 achene body, retrorsely spinulose; anthers 1.5-3 mm; styles 2-fid or 2-fid and 3-fid. Achenes brown when ripe, thickly plano-convex or unequally biconvex or compressed obtusely trigonous, obovoid, 1.8-2.8 × 1.3-2 mm; beak 0.1-0.3 mm. 2n = 78. Fruiting spring-summer (south), summer (north). Brackish or mineral-rich shores, marshes, fens; 0-2200 m; B.C., N.S.; Ala., Ariz., Calif., Conn., Del., Fla., Ga., Idaho, Kans., La., Maine, Md., Mass., Mich., Miss., Mo., Nev., N.H., N.J., N.Mex., N.Y., N.C., Okla., Oreg., R.I., S.C., Tex., Utah, Vt., Va., Wash., Wyo.; Mexico; West Indies (Puerto Rico); Central America; South America. The secondary involucral bracts of Schoenoplectus americanus lack blades and closely resemble floral scales, in contrast to S. pungens and S. deltarum. Although mostly very locally distributed, S. americanus is ecologically important in many coastal marshes. In recent years it has seriously declined (e.g., in Maryland and Louisiana). It may occur in southwestern Kansas; I have not seen a specimen. It probably has been extirpated from the Missouri station, based on one collection from 1886 (G. Yatskievych, pers. comm.). The report from New Hampshire is based on M. L. Fernald (1950). The stations on the Maine and Connecticut coasts, at Lake Champlain in Vermont, and in Oklahoma are based on putative S. americanus × S. pungens specimens. Some plants in the southwest are atypical in having nearly flat culm sides and leaf blades to 1.5 times as long as their sheaths as in the type of Scirpus monophyllus J. Presl & C. Presl from Peru. The name Scirpes americanus was long misapplied to Schoenoplectus pungens; Schoenoplectus americanus was known as Scirpus olneyi (A. E. Schuyler 1974).
Rhizomatous, colonial perennial 5-20 dm; stems avg stouter than in no. 6 [Scirpus pungens Vahl], often 1+ cm thick below, sharply triquetrous, with conspicuously concave sides, easily flattened in pressing; lvs few, all on the lower part of the stem, with normal sheath and short blade seldom over 1 dm long, sometimes 1 cm wide; spikelets 2-15, essentially sessile in a compact cluster, mostly 6-15 mm, subtended by a prominent, rather blunt, green bract 1-3.5(-5.5) cm that appears like a continuation of the culm, without additional bracts; scales thin, largely hyaline-scarious, the brown midrib firmer and commonly exserted as a short mucro about equaling the distal notch; bristles 4(-6), often unequal, retrorsely barbellate, not much if at all surpassing the achene; style bifid; achene planoconvex, 1.8-2.5 mm (including the 0.3 mm apiculus); 2n=78. Marshes, wet meadows, and other wet, low places, tolerant of alkali; N.S. to Wash., s. to S. Amer. Fr June-Sept. (S. olneyi; Schoenoplectus a.) The sterile hybrid with no. 6 is S. أontortus (A. J. Eames) T. Koyama.
Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.