Common Name: WATER-PLANTAIN FAMILY Habit: Annual, perennial herb from caudices, corms, stolons, rhizomes, or tubers, aquatic (+- emergent or on mud); roots fibrous, septate or not; monoecious, dioecious, or flowers bisexual. Stem: caudex short. Leaf: basal, simple, palmately veined, floating or not; submersed generally linear to ovate; emergent linear to sagittate. Inflorescence: generally scapose, umbel-, raceme-, or panicle-like; flowers, branches whorled. Flower: radial; sepals 3, generally green, generally persistent; petals 3, generally > sepals, white or pink; stamens 6--many; pistils 6--many, free or +- fused at base. Fruit: achene, generally compressed, beaked. Genera In Family: +- 12 genera, 75--100 species: especially tropics, subtropics. eFlora Treatment Author: Charles E. Turner, Robert R. Haynes & C. Barre Hellquist Scientific Editor: Thomas J. Rosatti.
Common Name: ARROWHEAD Habit: Annual, perennial herb; roots septate; generally monoecious; scape generally straight at inflorescence. Leaf: petiole cylindric to 3-angled; submersed blades tapered to base; floating or emergent blades generally sagittate (linear to ovate). Inflorescence: lowest node generally with 3 pistillate flowers, those above generally staminate. Flower: sepals 3--10 mm, reflexed to appressed in fruit; petals generally entire. Staminate Flower: stamens 7--30. Pistillate Flower: receptacle convex; pistils many, spiralled on convex receptacle. Fruit: body generally 2--3.5 mm, strongly compressed, abaxially winged or ridged; beak generally lateral, spreading to erect. Etymology: (Latin: arrow, from leaf shape) Note: Some species weedy; tubers of some eaten by humans, wildlife; Sagittaria brevirostra Mack. & Bush reportedly persisting at Stafford Lake and Chileno Laguna, Marin Co. Unabridged Reference: Bogin 1955 Mem New York Bot Gard 9:179--233
NATIVE Habit: Annual. Leaf: petioles of emergent leaves erect to ascending, blades 5--15 cm, sagittate, basal lobes +- = terminal. Inflorescence: lowest node with 2 bisexual flowers. Staminate Flower: filaments papillate. Bisexual Flower: pedicel recurved in fruit, thickened; sepals appressed in fruit; petals white, generally with green-yellow spot at base. Fruit: side oil-streaked when fresh; beak spreading, 0.4--0.8 mm. Ecology: Ponds, rice fields; Elevation: < 300 m. Bioregional Distribution: GV, SnFrB (Sonoma Co.), c SCo (Los Angeles Co.); Distribution Outside California: to eastern United States, northern Mexico. Flowering Time: Jul--Aug Jepson eFlora Author: Charles E. Turner, Robert R. Haynes & C. Barre Hellquist Index of California Plant Names (ICPN; linked via the Jepson Online Interchange) Previous taxon: Sagittaria longiloba Next taxon: Sagittaria rigida
Botanical illustration including Sagittaria montevidensis subsp. calycina
Citation for this treatment: Charles E. Turner, Robert R. Haynes & C. Barre Hellquist 2012, Sagittaria montevidensis subsp. calycina, in Jepson Flora Project (eds.) Jepson eFlora, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=52726, accessed on January 25, 2025.
Citation for the whole project: Jepson Flora Project (eds.) 2025, Jepson eFlora, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/, accessed on January 25, 2025.
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Duplicates counted once; synonyms included.
Species do not include records of infraspecific taxa, if there are more than 1 infraspecific taxon in CA.
Blue line denotes eFlora flowering time (fruiting time in some monocot genera).