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pondweed family

pondweed, potamot

Habit Herbs, perennial or rarely annual, rhizomatous or not rhizomatous, caulescent; turions absent or present. Herbs: rhizomes present; turions absent; tubers absent or present.
Stems

terete, nodes without oil glands.

Leaves

alternate or nearly opposite, submersed or both submersed and floating, sessile or petiolate;

sheath not persisting longer than blade, not leaving circular scar when shed, ligulate, not auriculate, or rarely auriculate;

intravaginal squamules scales, more than 2.

submersed, alternate, opaque, sessile, linear, channeled, turgid, acute at base acute, margins entire, apex obtuse to acute, veins 1–5;

stipules not tubular, adnate to base of leaf blades for 2/3 or more length of stipule, extending past adnation as free ligule.

Inflorescences

terminal or axillary, spikes, capitate spikes, or panicles of spikes, not subtended by spathe, pedunculate;

peduncle not elongating, not spiraling following fertilization.

spikes, capitate or cylindric, submersed;

peduncles flexible, not projecting inflorescence above surface of water.

Flowers

bisexual; subtending bracts absent;

tepals 4 in 1 series;

stamens [2 or] 4, epitepalous, in 1 series;

anthers distinct, dehiscing vertically;

pollen spheric;

pistils 1 or 4, mostly not stipitate, rarely short-stipitate;

ovules marginal, orthotropous.

pistils 4.

Fruits

drupaceous.

abaxially rounded, beaked or not, turgid;

embryo with less than 1 full coil.

Seeds

1;

embryo curved.

x

= 13.

Potamogetonaceae

Stuckenia

Distribution
Nearly worldwide
[BONAP county map]
from USDA
Nearly worldwide
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

The family has historically been considered to consist of two genera, Potamogeton and Groenlandia. Recent molecular evidence (D. H. Les, unpublished), combined with existing morphologic evidence, indicates that Potamogeton in the broad sense actually represents two separate lineages. We recognize those lineages at the generic level, Potamogeton in the strict sense and Stuckenia. Consequently, we accept three genera in the family, Potamogeton, Stuckenia, and Groenlandia.

Members of Potamogetonaceae have been variously combined with members of Zosteraceae, Cymodoceaceae, Zannichelliaceae, and Najadaceae to comprise compose Zosteraceae, Najadaceae, or Potamogetonaceae. Potamogetonaceae, as here interpreted, are separated from the other families by their bisexual flowers, the absence of spathelike bracts, and in some species, the presence of turions.

Aquatic vascular plants are known for their phenotypic plasticity (R. R. Haynes 1974). Plasticity may result from the varied environmental conditions in which the populations grow or from morphologic changes in individuals of a population during the growing season (R. R. Haynes 1975). Individuals in fruit have relatively consistent morphology within a species. Regardless of phenotypic plasticity, collections of Potamogetonaceae (and aquatic vascular plants in general) are often taken with little attention to the presence or absence of reproductive structures.

Reproductive features are most important in separating species of Potamogeton (R. R. Haynes 1978), and we include the entire family here. The keys may not always utilize reproductive features, but they are based on fruiting individuals. We strongly recommend that no one collect specimens of Potamogetonaceae that are lacking reproductive structures.

Leaves of Potamogetonaceae are stipulate. The stipules form a tubular sheath (stipular sheath) around the stem, free from or adnate to the base of the blade. In some species the leaf and sheath of submersed leaves are adnate for part of their length, and the leaf appears to have a sheathing base with an adaxial ligule at the junction of sheath and blade or petiole.

Fruits of Potamogetonaceae are drupaceous. The fruits do have endocarps but do not have fleshy mesocarps. Mesocarps exist but never become fleshy. Consequently, the fruits are not true drupes, they are drupaceous.

Many species of Potamogetonaceae undergo extensive vegetative reproduction either by turions or stem fragmentation. Turions are excellent modes of vegetative reproduction. The structures are produced at the stem tips and eventually fall to the substrate, either by a portion of the stem breaking off or by the stem itself falling to the substrate. The turions survive an unfavorable season, germinate, and grow into new plants during the next growing season. Because the unfavorable season is usually winter in North America, turions have been called "winter buds." At least one species, Potamogeton crispus, produces turions in early summer, and the turions survive the unfavorable season (summer, in this instance), germinating in the fall. The plant then survives the winter as a young individual, only a few centimeters long, even under ice, and begins growth as the water warms in the following spring. "Winter bud" is certainly not the correct term for P. crispus. The term "turions" designates all such structures, regardless of the unfavorable season.

Genera 3, species ca. 90 (2 genera, 37 species in the flora).

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

The stipules of Stuckenia are adnate to the blade for two-thirds to nearly the entire length of the stipule. The few species of Potamogeton with adnate stipules have the adnation less than half the length of the stipule, in fact, less than 4 mm. Submersed leaves of Potamogeton are translucent, flat, and without grooves or channels, whereas those of Stuckenia are opaque, channeled, and turgid.

A proposal to elevate Potamogeton subgenus. Coleogeton to the generic level, retaining the name Coleogeton, was presented (D. H. Les and R. R. Haynes 1996). Potamogeton pectinatus Linnaeus was chosen as the nomenclatural type. The name Stuckenia had been previously published, however, and P. pectinatus cited (C. Börner 1912), making the generic name Coleogeton superfluous. Stuckenia is the correct name, and the appropriate specific combinations have been made (J. Holub 1997).

Species ca. 6 (4 in the flora).

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

Key
1. Stipular sheaths of submersed leaves free from base of leaf blade, or if adnate, then adnate portion less than ½ length of stipule; leaves both submersed and floating or all submersed, submersed blades translucent, not channeled, flattened; peduncle stiff, if long enough then projecting inflorescence above surface of water.
Potamogeton
1. Stipular sheaths of submersed leaves adnate to base of leaf blade for 2/3 or more length of stipule; leaves all submersed, blades opaque, channeled, turgid; peduncle flexible, not projecting inflorescence above surface of water.
Stuckenia
1. Leaf apex acute, apiculate, cuspidate, rarely round; proximal stipular sheaths not inflated; stems abundantly branched, especially on distal portions; fruits distinctly beaked.
→ 2
1. Leaf apex notched, obtuse, or round, rarely apiculate; proximal stipular sheaths often inflated; stems sparsely branched on distal portions; fruits without beak.
→ 3
2. Leaves 0.4–1.5–3(–8.5) mm wide; leaf apex apiculate, cuspidate, or rarely round; plants from restricted range in western United States.
S. striata
2. Leaves 0.2–1 mm wide; leaf apex acute to mucronate or apiculate; widespread throughout United States and Canada.
S. pectinata
3. Stipules with distinct ligules to 20 mm, especially on distal stipules; summit of midstem stipules tight to stem, about the ± same width as stem; fruit 2–3 mm.
S. filiformis
3. Stipules without ligules or these to 2 mm on distal stipules; summit of midstem stipules inflated at least 2 times width of stem; fruit 3–3.8 mm.
S. vaginata
Source FNA vol. 22, p. 47. Treatment authors: Robert R. Haynes, C. Barre Hellquist. FNA vol. 22. Treatment authors: Robert R. Haynes, C. Barre Hellquist.
Parent taxa Potamogetonaceae
Subordinate taxa
Potamogeton, Stuckenia
S. filiformis, S. pectinata, S. striata, S. vaginata
Synonyms Coleogeton
Name authority Dumortier Borner: Botanisch-systematische notizen., Abh. Naturwiss. Vereine Bremen 21: 258. (1912)
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