TREATMENT FROM THE JEPSON MANUAL (1993) |
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©Copyright 1993 by the Regents of the University of California
For up-to-date information about California vascular plants, visit the Jepson eFlora. |
AND IS MAINTAINED FOR ARCHIVAL PURPOSES ONLY |
Perennial from long rhizomes, colonial, glabrous, generally aquatic (submersed to emergent), monoecious
Stem erect and stiff or submersed and floating above, cylindric, solid
Leaves basal and cauline, alternate, ± 2-ranked, spongy or stiff; sheath open; blade linear, flat, keeled, or triangular in X -section, spongy
Inflorescence spike-like (cylindric, dense) or head-like (spheric), terminal or axillary; staminate above pistillate, generally on same axis; flowers subtended by 1, minute bract
Staminate flower: perianth parts 0 or 16 and scale-like; stamens 18
Pistillate flower: perianth parts 0 or 16 and flattened; ovary 1, chambers 12(3), ovules 12(3)
Fruit: achene; wall thin, splitting in water
Genera in family: 2 genera, ± 25 species: worldwide. Sparganium formerly treated in Sparganiaceae. Family description and key to genera by R.F. Thorne.
Perennial from tough rhizomes, emergent or terrestrial, colonial, glabrous, monoecious
Stems erect, simple, hard
Leaf: sheath open; blade linear, C-shaped in X -section below, flat above
Inflorescence spike-like, terminal, cylindric; staminate flowers above, pistillate flowers below; flowers 1000+, staminate mixed with many papery scales; pistillate pedicels clustered on short, peg-like stalk
Staminate flower: perianth 0; stamens 27 on slender stalk; filaments slender, generally deciduous in fruit
Pistillate flowers fertile and sterile; perianth 0; pedicel slender, long-hairy; ovary 1-chambered, ovule 1, style long, thread-like, stigma 1; sterile ovary truncate to rounded
Fruit minute, fusiform, falling with pedicel and hairs; wall thin, splitting in water
Species in genus: ± 813 species: worldwide. Rhizomes, pollen of some species used for food; leaves used for caning
Etymology: (Greek: ancient name)
Reference: [Smith 1987 Arch Hydrobiol Beih 27:129138]
All North America species hybridize.
Native |
Plant 1530 dm
Leaf: sheath top lobed, lobes ear-like, membranous, veiny, generally 0 with age; blade 412 mm wide when fresh, 38 mm wide when dry, glands 0
Inflorescence generally < leaves; naked axis between staminate and pistillate flowers generally 18 cm; staminate bractlets generally 2-lobed, some irregularly branched, brownish; pistillate stalk ± 0.5 mm, peg-like, spike (3.5)620 cm, 1520 mm wide in fruit, brown, bractlet = pedicel hairs, tip rounded, dark brown
Staminate flower: pollen grains single
Pistillate flower: stigma linear; sterile ovary truncate, ± = pedicel hairs, green when fresh, pale brown when dry, hair tips brownish
Chromosomes: n=15
Ecology: Marshes
Elevation: < 2000 m.
Bioregional distribution: n High Sierra Nevada (Lake Tahoe), Great Central Valley, Central Coast, San Francisco Bay Area, South Coast
Distribution outside California: to e N.America, Eurasia
Possibly naturalized in CA.Hybrids with T. latifolia have been called T. X glauca Godr. .