Species Native to Missouri
                            
                         
                     
                    
                        
                            Common Name: green bulrush 
     
	
                        
                            Type: Rush or Sedge
                        
                        
                            Family: Cyperaceae
                        
                        
                            Native Range: North America
                        
                        
                            Zone: 3 to 9
                        
                        
                            Height: 4.00 to 5.00 feet
                        
                        
                            Spread: 3.00 to 4.00 feet
                        
                        
                            Bloom Time: June to July
                        
                        
                            Bloom Description: Green maturing to brown
                        
                        
                            Sun: Full sun to part shade
                        
                        
                            Water: Medium to wet
                        
                        
                            Maintenance: Low
                        
                        
                                Suggested Use: Water Plant, Naturalize, Rain Garden
		                    
                                Flower: Showy
		                    
                                Tolerate: Wet Soil
		                    
                        
                        
                     
                    
                 
                                   
                
                    Culture
                    Easily grown in moist to wet soils including shallow standing water in full sun to part shade.  Prefers some light shade in hot summer climates.  In large water gardens, it may be grown in submerged containers.  May also be planted in the mud at the margins of ponds or streams or in bog gardens.  Clumps may be divided in spring.  Naturalizes by creeping rhizomes, and, if left undisturbed in optimum growing conditions, will spread to form colonies.  Will self-sow in the landscape.  New plants are best started in spring or fall.
	             
                
                    Noteworthy Characteristics
                    Scirpus atrovirens, known as common bulrush, is a grass-like, rhizomatous marginal aquatic perennial that is native to moist meadows, bogs, stream/river/lake margins, sloughs, roadside ditches and wet depressions in Eastern and Central North America.  It typically forms a slowly-spreading clump of upright stems (culms) to 4-5’ tall.  Grasslike leaves (6-11 blades per culm) are broad (to 3/4" wide), linear and yellow green to dark green with rough edges.  Culms are topped in late spring with dark green spikelets that are clustered into spherical heads.  Spikelets mature to brown by mid-summer and remain attractive well into fall.  Foliage turns yellow-brown in fall.
Genus name is an old Latin name for this plant.
Specific epithet means dark green.
	             
                
                    Problems
                    No serious insect or disease problems.
	             
                
                    Uses
                    Large water gardens or bog gardens.  Edges of ponds or streams.  Moist low spots.