Stuckenia vaginata

Stuckenia vaginata
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Monocots
Order: Alismatales
Family: Potamogetonaceae
Genus: Stuckenia
Species: S. vaginata
Binomial name
Stuckenia vaginata
(Turcz.) Holub
Synonyms

Potamogeton vaginatus

Stuckenia vaginata (syn. Potamogeton vaginatus),[1] commonly called sheathed pondweed,[2] big sheathed pondweed or large-sheathed pondweed is a water plant species[3] that grows in fresh and brackish water in Europe,[4] Northern Asia (excluding China) and North America.[5] Sheathed pondweed is rare, but is not in the 2012 IUCN Red List.

Stuckenia vaginata is a fully submerged aquatic plant and does not have any floating or emerged leaves.

The flowers are wind pollinated and the seeds float. Tubers that are rich in starch are formed on the rhizomes. Reproduction can either be vegetative with tubers and plant fragments or sexual with seeds.

Description

The main difference between Stuckenia and Potamogeton is that the stipule joins the leaf base; when it is pulled the sheath and stipule comes away, similar to a grass sheath and ligule. Stuckenia vaginata is 1–4 metres long and has longer stipule sheaths than e.g. Stuckenia pecinata and Stuckenia filiformis. Similar to them, it has long narrow linear leaves.

References

  1. Lindqvist, Charlotte; De Laet, Jan; Haynes, Robert R.; Aagesen, Lone; Keener, Brian R.; Albert, Victor A. (2006). "Molecular phylogenetics of an aquatic plant lineage, Potamogetonaceae". Cladistics 22 (6): 568–588. doi:10.1111/j.1096-0031.2006.00124.x. ISSN 0748-3007.
  2. "Stuckenia vaginata". Natural Resources Conservation Service PLANTS Database. USDA. Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  3. Kaplan, Zdeněk (2008). "A Taxonomic Revision of Stuckenia (Potamogetonaceae) in Asia, with Notes on the Diversity and Variation of the Genus on a Worldwide Scale". Folia Geobotanica 43 (2): 159–234. doi:10.1007/s12224-008-9010-0. ISSN 1211-9520.
  4. Durnikin, D.A.; A.E. Zinovyeva (2013). "Singularity of Flora in Southern Water Basin of OB-Irtysh Interfluve of Western Siberia" (PDF). World Applied Sciences Journal 22 (3): 337–341. doi:10.5829/idosi.wasj.2013.22.03.2676. Retrieved 24 April 2013.
  5. "Stuckenia vaginata". Species details. ITIS. Retrieved 24 April 2013.

External links

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