Aponogetonaceae

J. Agardh
Common names: Aponogeton or Cape-pondweed Family
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 22. Treatment on page 39.
Revision as of 23:54, 29 July 2020 by imported>Volume Importer
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Herbs, perennial, rhizomatous, caulescent; turions absent. Leaves alternate, floating [submersed], petiolate [sessile]; sheath not persisting longer than blade, not leaving circular scar when shed, not ligulate, not auriculate; blade ovate to narrowly lanceolate [linear]; intravaginal squamules (i.e., minute appressed, planate trichomes attached at basal edge) scales, more than 2. Inflorescences terminal, spikes, subtended by spathe, pedunculate; peduncle following fertilization not elongating, not spiraling. Flowers bisexual [unisexual]; subtending bracts absent; perianth present [absent]; tepals 1 [–6]; stamens 6–18 [–50] in 2–3 [–4] series, not epitepalous; anthers distinct, dehiscing longitudinally; pollen ellipsoid; pistils 2–6 [–9], distinct, not stipitate; ovules basal-marginal, anatropous. Fruits follicles. Seeds 4; embryo straight.

Distribution

North America, s Africa, and tropical regions of Eastern Hemisphere

Discussion

Genera 1, species 5247 (1 genus, 1 species in the flora).

Lower Taxa

"not elongating" is not a number.

... more about "Aponogetonaceae"
C. Barre Hellquist +  and Robert R. Haynes +
J. Agardh +
ovate;narrowly lanceolate +
Aponogeton or Cape-pondweed Family +
North America +, s Africa +  and and tropical regions of Eastern Hemisphere +
basal-marginal +
not spiraling +
not stipitate +
ellipsoid +
bruggen1973a +  and bruggen1985a +
not auriculate +
not persisting +
not epitepalous +
Aponogetonaceae +
caulescent +  and rhizomatous +