The green links below add additional plants to the comparison table. Blue links lead to other Web sites.
enable glossary links

glasswort, pickleweed, saltwort, samphire, swampfire

American glasswort, Pacific swampfire, perennial saltwort, pickleweed, woody glasswort

Habit Shrubs, glabrous.
Stems

apparently jointed and fleshy when young, becoming woody and not jointed, not armed;

some stems terminated by an inflorescences, others entirely vegetative.

Leaves

opposite, united at base, petiolate, decurrent forming fleshy joints (sterile segments) fleshy on stem, fleshy; eventually deciduous;

blade fleshy triangular projections at tips of joints, edges with narrow scarious margins.

Inflorescences

terminal and lateral, spikelike, apparently jointed, each joint (fertile segment) consisting of 2 opposite, axillary, 3(–5)-flowered cymes embedded in and adnate to fleshy tissue of distal internode;

flowers in each cyme arranged in transverse rows, central flower separating lateral flowers, slightly larger;

flowers in each cyme partially separated by flaps of tissue which persist on stem when flowers have fallen.

Flowers

bisexual or unisexual, ± radially symmetric;

perianth segments persistent in fruit, 3–4, united except at tip, fleshy;

stamens 1–2;

styles 2–3.

Fruits

utriclelike, ellipsoid;

pericarp membranous.

Seeds

vertical, ellipsoid;

seed coat light brown, membranous, pubescent;

hairs strongly curved or hooked and slender, or conic, straight or slightly curved;

perisperm absent.

1.2–1.5 mm, pubescent;

hairs curved or hooked, longer hairs 1–2 mm.

Woody

stems erect or procumbent, creeping and sometimes rooting at base, 10–50 cm;

stems sparingly to much-branched, younger branches with fleshy segments 5–20 × 2–4 mm.

Terminal

spikes: larger with 12–40 segments, 20–85 mm.

Fertile

segments: larger 2–4.5 × 2.5–3.8 mm;

central flowers 1.6–2.8 × 1–2.5 mm;

anthers 0.7–1 mm.

x

= 9.

Sarcocornia

Sarcocornia pacifica

Phenology Flowering late summer–early fall.
Habitat Coastal salt marshes, tidal flats
Elevation 0 m (0 ft)
Distribution
from USDA
North America; w Europe; Mediterranean region; s Africa; e Africa; Australasia
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
CA; CT; DE; FL; GA; MA; MD; NC; NH; NJ; NY; RI; SC; VA; Mexico
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Species ca. 15 (3 in the flora).

Sarcocornia is taxonomically difficult and has never been the subject of a taxonomic revision for the Northern Hemisphere. Although it is possible to identify dry specimens to some extent, by comparison, it is impossible to obtain from dried specimens data that can be used in a taxonomic revision. Characters that may be taxonomically useful are lost on drying, especially flower and inflorescence characters and those derived from the fleshy vegetative segments. Habit appears to be useful, but few specimen labels note the habit of the living plant, and the parts collected rarely allow for a reliable determination of habit. Some species, such as S. perennis are prostrate, with the woody stems readily rooting in the substrate. Others such as S. pacifica are procumbent to erect shrubs in which the woody stems usually do not root. This apparently obvious habit difference is sometimes confounded by external factors, erect species becoming procumbent due to water movement, trampling, or burial by silt or sand deposits. Conversely, prostrate rooting species can be disturbed by erosion and appear to be procumbent plants of a nonrooting species.

One of the most useful characters, the indumentum on the testa of the seeds, is rarely present in dried specimens because of the lateness of the plants’ flowering season. Plants collected in August and September rarely have even immature seeds present, so most herbarium specimens do not display this character.

The consequence of these problems is that most accounts of Sarcocornia in North America recognize only one species, frequently using the name Salicornia virginica Linnaeus for the collective entity. The type specimens of S. virginica were collected by John Clayton, presumably from Virginia, which are immature annuals and not flowering. The name S. virginica cannot be applied to a species in this genus.

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

Sarcocornia pacifica appears to be endemic to the Americas, although its precise delimitation and distribution are unclear. Well-grown plants can be easily recognized by the long terminal spikes, but depauperate plants are difficult to distinguish from S. perennis. The name Salicornia virginica has often been applied to this species.

Salicornia ambigua Michaux, Fl. Bor.-Amer. 1: 2. 1803, may be the earliest name for this species, although it could also be a synonym of Sarcocornia perennis. Until the taxonomy of the east-coast plants of the genus has been resolved, the application of Michaux’s binomial is uncertain.

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

Key
1. Seeds smooth except for conic, straight papillae on edge; papillae 0.6-0.9 mm; anthers 0.9-1.8 mm
S. utahensis
1. Seeds covered with slender, hooked or strongly curved hairs; hairs mostly 1-2 mm; anthers 0.7-1 mm
→ 2
2. Plants with creeping, rooting, woody stems; erect stems simple or sparingly branched, 10-20(-30) cm; longest terminal spikes with 7-14 fertile segments
S. perennis
2. Plants with erect or procumbent woody stems, sometimes creeping and rooting at base; stems sparingly to much-branched, 10-50 cm; longest terminal spikes on plant with 12-40 fertile segments
S. pacifica
Source FNA vol. 4. Author: Peter W. Ball. FNA vol. 4, p. 386.
Parent taxa Chenopodiaceae Chenopodiaceae > Sarcocornia
Sibling taxa
S. perennis, S. utahensis
Subordinate taxa
S. pacifica, S. perennis, S. utahensis
Synonyms Salicornia section Perennes Salicornia pacifica
Name authority A. J. Scott: B ot. J. Linn. Soc. 75: 366. (1978) (Standley) A. J. Scott: Bot. J. Linn. Soc. 75: 369. (1978)
Web links