Plants perennial; rhizomes soft, longer internodes 2-4 cm, cortex loose, scales fugaceous, 6 mm, thinly membranous and translucent. Culms not rooting at tips, terete, 10-40 cm, soft to firm, smooth. Leaves: distal leaf sheaths proximally brownish or sometimes reddish, distally stramineous to green. Spikelets ovoid to oblong-subcylindric, 4-12 × 2-3.5 mm, apex acute to rounded; proximal scale empty, clasping 1/2 of culm, like floral scales; subproximal 1 or 2 scales often empty; floral scales 20-100, 10 per mm of rachilla, entirely stramineous or sometimes red-brown, ovate, (1.5-)2-2.5 × 1.5 mm, apex broadly rounded, entire. Flowers: perianth bristles (5-)6(-8), brown, stout, the longer equaling achene or tubercle, retrorsely spinulose; stamens 3; anthers brown, 1 mm. Achenes falling with scales, obovoid, angles keeled, 0.8-1 × 0.7-0.8 mm, apex with short neck. Tubercles whitish to brown, mammillate to pyramidal, 0.2-0.3 × 0.3-0.35 mm, 1/3 or less as wide as achene. Fruiting summer. Coastal saltmarsh edges, sloughs, beaches, dune depressions, ditches; 0 m; Ala., Fla., Ga., La., Md., Miss., N.Mex., N.C., S.C., Tex.; Mexico; Bermuda. In most spikelets, the bright brown stigmas contrast strikingly with the stramineous floral scales. We have not seen vouchers for H. K. Svenson´s (1937) reports of Eleocharis albida from Virginia. The collections we have seen from Maryland are from the 1800s.