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Botany Photo of the Day
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Sparganium emersum

Sparganium emersum

Sparganiaceae (Bur-reed family), which is sometimes included in the Typhaceae, consists of a single genus of perennial aquatic and paludial (marsh-inhabiting) species. The family exhibits cauline (stem) and basal leaves as well as a single terminal inflorescence furnished with multiple tightly clustered racemose flower heads. Generally speaking, Sparganiaceae species inhabit the northern temperate zone, though a few species extend south to Mexico, New Zealand, and Australia.

Sparganiaceae's single genus, Sparganium, includes 14 species, and, like a number of plants recently featured here, it was first described by Linnaeus in the 1750s. Species exhibit strap-shaped leaves, and it is from this feature that Dioscorides, botanist and 'Father of Medicine', drew inspiration when he named these plants after sparganon, the Greek term for 'swaddling band'. Species produce odorless, monoecious flowers that bloom from late spring to late summer depending on altitude and latitude. In the image, the clusters of male flowers, now spent, are located above the females on the floral axis.

The species, S. emersum, commonly known as the European bur-reed, grows up to a metre in height in the still or slowly flowing waters of both North America and Eurasia. The plant is particularly abundant in the western half of North America, though less robust forms are found east of Manitoba and Minnesota. The species is perennial and rhizomatous, and it bears a variety of leaves, some of which stand stiff and erect while others float limply on the surface of the water below. The basal leaves, which are triangular in cross section, are often used to distinguish this from other Sparganium species.

7 Comments

jan commented:

Cor, I haven't seen one of these for years. Must get some for the college pond as an educational feature

Michael F commented:

Nice account; one small correction, the common name is Unbranched Bur-reed: http://ip30.eti.uva.nl/BIS/flora.php?selected=beschrijving&menuentry=soorten&id=4715

Eric La Fountaine commented:

In North America, the plant is commonly known as European bur-reed (USDA Plants Profile, E-Flora BC). This is the trouble with common names, there is no commonly accepted standard for them.

Annie Morgan commented:

A bur-reed by any other name .....

elizabeth a airhart commented:

i look just like this after my shower

Quin commented:

we guys, gone in a poof - the gals stick around and take care of things.......

Mary Ann, in Toronto commented:

Sigh.... I love these. I love wetlands. I live in the city and don't get out enough, or far enough. A pleasure to gaze at this photo; it will have to suffice, for now at least. Sigh....

Elizabeth: you look more like the top half, or the bottom half, or the brown one at the right? ;)

Quin:
:-))

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