Ludwigia alata |
Ludwigia |
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wing primrose-willow |
false loosestrife, primrose-willow, water purslane, water-primrose |
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Habit | Herbs with aerenchyma when base submerged, forming stolons from lower nodes, 8–65(–95) cm, 0.7–2.5 mm thick. | Herbs, usually perennial, rarely annual, or shrubs, [rarely trees], caulescent, usually glabrous, strigillose, villous, or hirtellous, rarely glandular-puberulent. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | erect or somewhat sprawling, slightly to distinctly winged (wings to 1.8 mm wide), branched distally, 40–120(–160) cm, glabrous. |
erect to spreading or prostrate and then often rooting at nodes, sometimes floating, submerged parts, when present, sometimes swollen with spongy aerenchyma or bearing inflated, white, spongy pneumatophores, usually branched. |
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Leaves | alternate; stipules ovate-deltate, often narrowly so, 0.2–0.4 × 0.1–0.3 mm, succulent; stolons: petiole 0.15–1 cm, blades orbiculate to oblanceolate or broadly elliptic, 0.4–2.6 × 0.4–1.5 cm, base attenuate, apex rounded to subacute; stems: petiole 0–0.3 cm, blade lanceolate-elliptic or very narrowly elliptic to linear, sometimes to oblanceolate or oblanceolate-elliptic near base, 1.8–10 × 0.2–1.3(–2) cm, base narrowly cuneate or attenuate, margins subentire with remote hydathodal glands, rarely minutely papillose-serrulate near apex, apex acute to narrowly acute, leaves on side branches much reduced; bracts much reduced. |
cauline, usually alternate, rarely opposite; stipules present, often deciduous, usually dark reddish green; usually petiolate, sometimes sessile; blade usually reduced distally, usually linear to lanceolate, oblong, or obovate, rarely deltate, with 1[or 2] ± conspicuous submarginal vein[s], margins entire, serrulate, or glandular-serrulate, usually without oil cells. |
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Inflorescences | sometimes congested, leafy spikes or racemes, flowers solitary in distal leaf axils; bracteoles attached near base of ovary, lanceolate-elliptic or narrowly so, 2.4–4.7 × 0.6–1.5 mm, margins minutely papillose or smooth, apex acute, surfaces glabrous. |
spikes, racemes, or clusters, solitary or paired in leaf axils, erect or decumbent and ascending at tip; bracteoles usually 2 and conspicuous, black or dark red, often scalelike, at or near base of ovary, sometimes deciduous early, rarely absent. |
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Flowers | sepals spreading to reflexed, creamy white adaxially, broadly ovate-deltate, 2–4 × 1.6–4 mm, margins smooth or minutely papillose-serrulate, apex acute or acuminate, surfaces glabrous; petals 0; filaments nearly translucent, 1.1–1.7 mm, slightly dilated near base, anthers 0.5–0.9 × 0.4–0.7 mm; pollen shed singly; ovary obpyramidal, sharply 4-angled, 2–3.8 × 2–3.5 mm; nectary disc elevated 0.5–0.8 mm on ovary apex, bright yellow, square with rounded corners, 2–3.3 mm diam., prominently 4-lobed, glabrous; style pale green, 0.8–1.3 mm, glabrous, stigma pale yellow, subglobose, 0.3–0.6 × 0.3–0.7 mm, shallowly 4-lobed on top, not exserted beyond anthers. |
bisexual, actinomorphic, pedicellate or sessile; floral tube absent; sepals persistent after anthesis or tardily caducous, (3 or)4 or 5(–7), green, sometimes yellow or cream, often becoming flushed with red post-anthesis, spreading to suberect; petals caducous, usually (3 or)4 or 5(–7), sometimes 0, usually yellow, sometimes white, when yellow, then often ultraviolet-reflecting, margins entire; stamens as many as sepals in 1 series, or 2 times as many as sepals in 2 subequal or unequal series; anthers versatile, on smallest flowers appearing basifixed, pollen shed singly or in polyads or tetrads, 3(–5)-aperturate; ovary usually with as many locules as sepals, rarely more, apex flat or conical, often with raised or depressed nectary lobes surrounding base of each epipetalous stamen; style present [very rarely absent in sect. Arborescentes], usually glabrous; stigma entire or irregularly lobed, capitate or hemispherical, distal 1/2 receptive, surface wet and papillate. |
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Fruit | a capsule, spreading to erect, obconic, cylindric to clavate, turbinate, obpyramidal, or globose to cuboid, terete to sharply 4+-angled, straight to slightly curved, dehiscent irregularly or by a terminal pore, an apical ring, or flaps separating from valvelike apex, long-pedicellate to subsessile. |
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Capsules | obpyramidal, sharply 4-angled and 4-winged, 3–5 × 2.8–4.5 mm, with hard walls somewhat bulging, dehiscent by apical ring, pedicel 0–0.8 mm. |
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Seeds | light brown, ellipsoid, slightly curved on both ends, 0.6–0.7 × 0.3–0.4 mm, surface cells elongate transversely to seed length. |
50–400, in 1–several rows per locule, usually free, sometimes embedded in endocarp, narrowly ovoid, smooth or finely pitted, raphe usually inconspicuous, sometimes expanded and nearly equal to seed [very rarely expanded into asymmetrical wing]. |
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x |
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2n | = 48. |
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Ludwigia alata |
Ludwigia |
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Phenology | Flowering Jun–Oct. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Ditches, edges of ponds and lagoons, peaty or sandy swales, open cypress swamps, sandy borrow pits in open pine woods, swampy, flat outcrops of oolitic rocks, wet savannas, tidal flats, brackish marshes, sandy beach strands and hammocks. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 0–50 m. (0–200 ft.) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
AL; FL; GA; LA; MS; NC; SC; VA; West Indies (Jamaica) |
North America; Mexico; Central America; South America; West Indies; Bermuda; se Asia; Africa; Indian Ocean Islands; Pacific Islands [Introduced in Europe, w, s Asia, Australia] |
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Discussion | Ludwigia alata occurs only at very low elevations along the Atlantic and Gulf coastal plains from Virginia to the tip of Florida, and west to southwestern Louisiana, with disjunct populations on Jamaica (C. I. Peng 1989). This hexaploid species is often confused with L. lanceolata, with which it shares two genomes (Peng 1988, 1989) and with which it is frequently sympatric. The showy petals of L. alata suggest a higher level of outcrossing, and numerous natural hybrids have been documented (Peng 1988, 1989). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Species 82 (31 in the flora). Ludwigia is a pansubtropical genus currently divided into 22 sections (P. H. Raven [1963]1964; T. P. Ramamoorthy and E. Zardini 1987; Zardini and Raven 1992; W. L. Wagner et al. 2007). The genus is well represented in North America and South America, and is frequent in Africa and south Asia. Raven provided a synopsis of Ludwigia, including in it all previously segregated genera (Isnardia, Jussiaea, Ludwigiantha, and Oocarpon), based in part on P. A. Munz (1942, 1944), H. Hara (1953), and others. H. E. Baillon (1866–1895, vol. 6) was the first author to merge Isnardia and Jussiaea under Ludwigia, and consequently Ludwigia is treated as having priority over the former two genera. Therefore, J. P. M. Brenan’s (1953) subsequent merging of Ludwigia under Jussiaea is not acceptable (vide Shenzhen Code Art. 11.5). Hara (1953) referenced both Baillon and Brenan, and followed the then-practiced botanical code to accept Ludwigia over Jussiaea. Hara, and later Raven, made most of the new combinations needed in Ludwigia, and their works firmly established Ludwigia. Raven subdivided the genus into 17 sections using a combination of characters: sepal number, stamens as many or two times as many as sepals; pollen as monads or in tetrads (polyads were not distinguished until reported by J. Praglowski et al. 1983), capsule morphology, and seed morphology. The large sect. Myrtocarpus, primarily distributed in South America, was later subdivided into a total of eight sections (Ramamoorthy 1979; Ramamoorthy and Zardini; Zardini and Raven). Wagner et al. placed sect. Oocarpon into sect. Oligospermum (= sect. Jussiaea), and the present treatment, based on recent molecular analysis (Liu S. H. et al. 2017), combines formerly recognized sect. Microcarpium with sect. Isnardia. This reduces the number of sections to 22, 14 of which are monospecific; Liu et al. did not have sufficient resolution to evaluate classification of sect. Myrtocarpus and its segregates. Since the synopsis by P. H. Raven ([1963]1964), data have become available for Ludwigia from cytology (M. Kurabayashi et al. 1962; Raven and W. Tai 1979; E. Zardini et al. 1991), palynology (J. J. Skvarla et al. 1975, 1976, 1978; J. Praglowski et al. 1983; V. C. Patel et al. 1984), embryology (H. Tobe and Raven 1983, 1985, 1986, 1986b, 1996), and anatomy (S. Carlquist 1975, 1977, 1982b; R. H. Eyde 1977, 1979, 1981, 1982; R. C. Keating 1982), as well as several published and unpublished revisions of sections. These data provide a rich source of potential characters for phylogenetic analysis. All recent analyses, whether morphological or molecular (see especially Eyde 1977, 1979; R. A. Levin et al. 2003, 2004; Liu S. H.et al. 2017), strongly support Ludwigia as monophyletic and sister to the rest of the family. Liu et al. also found strong support for a monophyletic sect. Ludwigia, a monophyletic sect. Isnardia that includes sect. Microcarpium, and a clade comprised of sects. Isnardia, Ludwigia, and Miquelia that is sister to the rest of the genus. Liu et al. found poor resolution in that second branch, due in part to inadequate sampling, but strong support for monophyletic sects. Jussiaea and Macrocarpon. Ludwigia appears to have diverged from the common ancestor of the family between 80 and 93 Ma (E. Conti et al. 1997; K. J. Sytsma et al. 2004). The genus exhibits a complex biogeographic pattern, with ten sections endemic or centered in South America (39 species), two in North America (24 species), five in Africa (seven species), two in Asia (two species), and two not clearly centered in a single continent (10 species). Ludwigia has a base chromosome number of x = 8; aneuploidy is unknown, but polyploidy is extensive (P. H. Raven and W. Tai 1979; E. Zardini et al. 1991). S. A. Graham and T. B. Cavalcanti (2001) proposed that x = 8 is the base chromosome number for Lythraceae, which is sister to Onagraceae. This suggests that x = 8 in Ludwigia is a plesiomorphy for Onagraceae, and that the chromosome number changed to x = 11 or x = 10 (in Hauya) on the branch leading to the rest of the family. In the absence of a more thorough revision and formal phylogenetic analysis of Ludwigia, this treatment follows the most recent classification of the genus by W. L. Wagner et al. (2007), which is based primarily on P. H. Raven ([1963]1964) and supported by subsequent systematic and anatomical studies (especially Raven and W. Tai 1979; J. Praglowski et al. 1983; T. P. Ramamoorthy and E. Zardini 1987; Zardini and Raven 1992). Molecular analyses by Liu S. H. et al. (2017) support inclusion of sect. Microcarpium within sect. Isnardia, which involves more than half of the North American species. The sections are arranged using characters from Raven and elsewhere, as described in Wagner et al. Species of Ludwigia characteristically grow in wet habitats, and some are nearly or fully aquatic. Those species often have adaptations for growing in water: aerenchyma—respiratory tissue with particularly large intercellular spaces—in the proximal stems, and/or pneumatophores, which are spongy, white roots arising from internodes on floating stems that facilitate aeration needed for root respiration in hydrophytic plants. Species in sect. Ludwigia have fusiform, tuberous roots that may also serve an adaptive function in wet habitats. Seventy-five species of Ludwigia are self-compatible and seven (in sects. Macrocarpon and Myrtocarpus) are self-incompatible (P. H. Raven 1979). Flowers of Ludwigia are diurnal, remaining open for several days or, sometimes, for only one day (in small-flowered autogamous species); species may be outcrossing and pollinated by bees, flower-flies, or butterflies, or autogamous (Raven). Several species of Ludwigia are cultivated as aquarium plants (for example, L. repens); others are grown in water gardens. Several species, especially in sect. Jussiaea, are considered noxious, invasive species (M. Wood 2006). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Source | FNA vol. 10. | FNA vol. 10. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | Isnardia alata | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | Elliott: Sketch Bot. S. Carolina 1: 212. (1817) | Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 1: 118 — (as Ludvigia), [1204]. 1753: Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 55. (1754) — (as Ludvigia), [1204]. 1753 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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