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common water-hyacinth, water hyacinth

hyacinth, jacinthe d'eau, water-hyacinth

Habit Plants perennial, typically free-floating. Herbs, annual or perennial, rooting in mud or free-floating.
Vegetative stems

condensed, except when branching.

submersed and growing to surface, or emersed and short.

Flowering stems

erect, bending over after flowering, to 25 cm, distal internode less than 4 cm.

emersed.

Inflorescences

spicate, up to 30-flowered, elongating over several days;

spathes folded, with acuminate to caudate extension.

Spikes

4–15-flowered;

spathes obovate, 4–11 cm;

peduncle 5–12.5 cm, glabrous.

Flowers

opening individually within 2 hours after sunrise, wilting by night;

perianth blue or mauve-blue, limb lobes obovate, 16–37 mm, margins entire, central distal lobe with dark blotch in center and yellow spot within blotch;

proximal stamens 20–35 mm, distal 14–19 mm;

anthers 1.7–2.1 mm;

style 3-lobed.

open 1 day only;

perianth with tepals connate for more than 1/2 its length, blue, mauve, or rarely white, funnelform, limb lobes obovate to oblanceolate, longer than 2 cm, glandular-pubescent, apex obtuse to acute;

stamens 6, distal 3 shorter than proximal 3;

filaments curved upward near apex, purple, glandular-pubescent;

anthers yellow, rounded to oblong;

ovary incompletely 3-locular;

ovules many;

style 3-lobed.

Fruits

capsular, elongate.

Seeds

11–14-winged, 1.1–2.1 × 0.6–0.9 mm.

10–200, ovoid, testa with longitudinal wings.

Sessile

leaves in basal rosette.

leaves forming basal rosette or alternate on elongate vegetative stem;

apex acuminate.

Petiolate

leaves floating or emersed;

stipule 2.5–14 cm, apex truncate;

petiole at least slightly swollen, 3.5–33 cm;

blade ovate to round, 2.5–11 × 3.5–9.5 cm.

leaves floating or emersed;

blade cordate to ovate or round, coriaceous, apex obtuse.

2n

= 32.

Eichhornia crassipes

Eichhornia

Phenology Flowering early spring–late fall.
Habitat Ponds, ditches, canals, calm waters of rivers
Elevation 0–300 m (0–1000 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AL; AZ; CA; FL; GA; LA; MS; NC; SC; TX; VA; worldwide; tropics and subtropics [Introduced in North America]
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from USDA
Neotropics and Africa [Introduced in North America]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

This is probably the most aggressive aquatic weed ever known in the tropics (T. D. Center and N. R. Spencer 1981; R. E. Fitzsimons and R. H. Vallejos 1986; W. T. Penfound and T. T. Earle 1948; H. J. Webber 1897) and has been documented to cause extensive physiological changes in the aquatic environment (G. R. Ultsch 1973). It is on the USDA/APHIS noxious weeds list and the Florida Department of Natural Resources prohibited list (D. C. Schmitz 1990). Extensive research has gone into pesticide and biological control (R. G. Baer and P. C. Quimby Jr. 1981; T. D. Center and T. K. Van 1989; J. C. Joyce and W. T. Haller 1985; D. C. Schmitz 1990), resulting in its decline in Florida. Plants were probably first introduced into the U.S. at the Louisiana exposition in 1884 (W. T. Penfound and T. T. Earle 1948), and the species is now known in all states where freezing temperatures are minimal. Research results from the 1970s suggest that the species may have an economic importance by removing toxic substances from water (F. Chigbo et al. 1982).

The inflated petiole has long been a characteristic used to separate Eichhornia crassipes from other species of the genus. Yet on older plants under crowded conditions, the petiole shows little or no swelling (W. T. Penfound and T. T. Earle 1948). This has resulted in several misidentifications of specimens as E. azurea.

Inflorescences typically elongate overnight, and all flowers open the same day (W. T. Penfound and T. T. Earle 1948). However, some robust specimens have inflorescences in which the proximal flowers open the first day and the distal 2–4 flowers open on the subsequent day. Individual flowers open shortly after dawn and wilt by nightfall. By the next morning, the flowering stem has bent such that the developing fruits are typically submersed, allowing seed development to occur under water (W. T. Penfound and T. T. Earle 1948).

S. C. H. Barrett (1977, 1979, 1980, 1980b, 1988, 1989) has studied the reproductive biology in depth. The water hyacinth is a tristylous species; however, the only naturally occuring populations with all three morphs are in northeastern Brazil. This led S. C. H. Barrett and I. W. Forno (1982) to conclude that Eichornia crassipes is native to Amazonia. All other studied populations in the world have only one or two of the floral morphs. In some populations, a breakdown in the tristylous condition was observed whereby the stigma was found to be adjacent to anthers in some flowers (semihomostylous condition), resulting in some seed production (S. C. H. Barrett 1979). In general, seed production in temperate populations was found to be half that of tropical populations, mainly due to differences in levels of insect visitation (S. C. H. Barrett 1980b).

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Species 7 (2 in the flora).

Eichhornia paniculata (Sprengel) Solms-Laubach [syn. Piaropus paniculatus (Sprengel) Small] was reported by J. K. Small (1913) as occurring in drainage ditches of peninsular Florida. The collection was made in 1907 in Manatee County (J. K. Small s.n., NY). This species can be recognized by its growing rooted in mud and by the presence of cordate leaves and an elongate flowering stem terminated by a panicule of 20–100 flowers.

Eichhornia diversifolia (Vahl) Urban, native to Puerto Rico, is not known to occur in the flora area.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Key
1. Plants typically free-floating; sessile leaves produced in rosette; petioles commonly inflated perianth limb lobe margins entire
E. crassipes
1. Plants typically rooted in mud; sessile leaves alternate on elongate stem; inflated petioles absent; perianth limb lobe margins erose
E. azurea
Source FNA vol. 26, p. 40. FNA vol. 26, p. 38.
Parent taxa Pontederiaceae > Eichhornia Pontederiaceae
Sibling taxa
E. azurea
Subordinate taxa
E. azurea, E. crassipes
Synonyms Pontederia crassipes, E. speciosa, Piaropus crassipes Piaropus
Name authority (Martius) Solms: in A. L. P. P. de Candolle and C. de Candolle, Monogr. Phan. 4: 527. (1883) Kunth: Eichhornia, 3. (1842)
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