Distribution: Worldwide, but mostly in moist, cool places in the north temperate zone with extensions into the tropical highlands. The Texas flora includes 15 genera and 207 species in Texas with five endemic species representing four genera (see also North American taxa).
Floral structure:

Significant features:
Small, reduced flowers on grass-like (tufted or caespitose) plants but
differing from the 'true' grasses (Poaceae) by having stems (known as 'culms'
in this order) that are often triangular and solid
(usually pithy) with leaves 3-ranked
or arranged in 3 rows corresponding to the 'sides' of the angular stems.
Sheathing leaf bases of the Cyperaceae are also often 'closed' or firmly
connected to the culm. Reproductive structure also differs from the Poaceae
in that each flower, often unisexual, is subtended by only a single
bract. Clusters of florets, known as 'spikelets' for both
families, are not subtended by pairs of 'sterile' bracts (glumes)
in the Cyperaceae and some genera of the family show a perianth that is
modified to form a series of bristles or scales. The fruit is single-seeded,
often a triangular or lenticular (lens shaped) achene or nutlet that, is
some genera, carries features that are essential for identification
to both genus and species.
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More information on the Cyperaceae