Eleocharis erythropoda Steudel (Q3290)

From Canadian Flora Commons
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Eleocharis erythropoda is a taxon with the rank species within the series Eleocharis ser. Eleocharis
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Eleocharis erythropoda Steudel
Eleocharis erythropoda is a taxon with the rank species within the series Eleocharis ser. Eleocharis

    Statements

    taxon/id/Eleocharis erythropoda Steudel
    0 references
    Eleocharis erythropoda Steudel
    Eleocharis erythropoda
    Steudel
    FNA Editorial Committee. 2002. Flora of North America north of Mexico. Volume 23: Cyperaceae. Oxford University Press, New York.
    accepted
    Eleocharis erythropoda
    éléocharide à tiges rouges (French)
    red-stemmed spikerush (English)
    bald spikerush (English)
    red-footed spikerush (English)
    Éléocharide à tiges rouges (English)
    1 reference
    Klinkenberg, B. (ed.). 2010+. E-Flora BC: Electronic Atlas of the Plants of British Columbia. Lab. for Advanced Spatial Analysis, Department of Geography, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. http://www.eflora.bc.ca http://www.eflora.bc.ca/
    1 reference
    Packer, J.G. & A.J. Gould. 2017.Vascular Plants of Alberta. Part 1: Ferns, Fern Allies, Gymnospermes, and Monocots. University of Calgary Press, Calgary.
    1 reference
    Harms, V.L. 2006. Annotated catalogue of Saskatchewan vascular plants. http://www.biodiversity.sk.ca/Docs/AnnotatedCatalogueSKVascPlants2006.pdf
    1 reference
    Newmaster, S.G. & S. Ragupathy. 2005. Flora Ontario - Integrated Botanical Information System (FOIBIS), Phase I. University of Guelph, Canada. http://www.uoguelph.ca/foibis http://www.uoguelph.ca/foibis/
    1 reference
    Marie-Victorin, Fr. 1995. Flore laurentienne. 3e éd. Mise à jour et annotée par L. Brouillet, S.G. Hay, I. Goulet, M. Blondeau, J. Cayouette et J. Labrecque. Gaétan Morin éditeur. 1093 pp.
    1 reference
    Hinds, H.R. 2000. Flora of New Brunswick : a manual for the identification of the vascular plants of New Brunswick. 2nd edition. Biology Department, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton. 699 pp.
    1 reference
    Bennett, B., P.M. Catling, W.J. Cody & G.W. Argus. 2010. New records of vascular plants in the Yukon Territory VIII. Canadian Field Naturalist 124 (1): 1-27. http://canadianfieldnaturalist.ca/index.php/cfn/article/view/1025
    1 reference
    Catling, P.M., W.J. Cody & Mitrow. 2005. A compilation of additions to the flora of the continental portions of Northwest Territories and Nunavut. Botanical Electronic News 353. http://www.ou.edu/cas/botany-micro/ben/ben353.html http://www.ou.edu/cas/botany-micro/ben/ben353.html
    non-calcareous
    calcareous
    brackish shores
    marshes
    meadows
    disturbed places
    Plants perennial, mat-forming;
    rhizomes evident, long, 0.5–1.5 mm thick, soft to firm, cortex often breaking loose, longer internodes 5–30 mm, scales often fugaceous, 4–8 mm, membranous, not fibrous.
    Culms terete, often with 8–12 blunt ridges when dry, 8–80 cm × 0.3–1.4 mm, firm to soft, internally spongy.
    Leaves: distal leaf-sheaths persistent, not splitting, proximally red (to stramineous), distally green to stramineous, usually inflated, often callose, membranous to papery, apex often redbrown, broadly obtuse to subacute, tooth sometimes present, to 0.1 mm.
    Spikelets ovoid to lanceoloid or nearly cylindric, 3–18 × 2–3 (–4) mm, apex acute (to obtuse);
    proximal scale amplexicaulous, entire;
    floral scales often spreading in fruit, 15–50, 4–5 per mm of rachilla, medium brown to sometimes redbrown, midrib regions mostly stramineous to green, in proximal part of spikelet ovate, apex rounded, in distal part lanceolate, apex entire, acute, 2–3.5 × 1.5–1.7 mm, mostly carinate.
    Flowers: perianth bristles 4 or absent, light-brown to stramineous, stout, usually equal, equaling achene to slightly exceeding tubercle;
    anthers dark yellow to stramineous, 1–1.8 mm, apiculate;
    Achenes not persistent, dark yellow, stramineous, or dark-brown, obovoid to obpyriform, biconvex, angles obscure, 0.9–1.6 × 0.7–1.2 mm, apex rounded, neck absent to long, smooth at 30X, or sometimes finely rugulose at 10–30X with 20 or more horizontal ridges in a vertical series.
    Tubercles brown to whitish, pyramidal, much higher than wide to, lower than wide, 0.35–0.65 × 0.2–0.6 mm. 2n = 16, 18, 19, 20.