Comprehensive Description
provided by North American Flora
Apium nodiflorum (L.) Lag. Amen. Nat. 101. 1821
S«»»i nodiflorum L. Sp. PI. 251. 1753.
Cicuta nodiflara Crantz, Class. Umbell. 97. 1767.
Seseli nodiflorum Scop. Fl. Cam. ed. 2. 1: 213. 1772.
Sison nodiflorum Brot. Fl. Lusit. 1: 423. 1804.
Pimpinella nodiflora Stokes, Bot. Mat. Med. 2: 149. 1812.
Helosciadium nodiflorum Koch, Nova Acta Acad. Leop.-Carol. 12: 126. 1825.
Helodium nodiflorum Dumort. Fl. Belg. 77. 1827.
Selinum nodiflorum E. H. L. Krause in Sturm, Fl. Deuts. ed. 2. 12: 34. 1904.
Plants aquatic or amphibious, perennial, the stems creeping to ascending or erect, 1.5-10 dm. high or long, from a creeping rhizome and rooting at the lower nodes; leaves oblong in general outline, excluding the petioles up to 3 dm. long, pinnate with 3-9 pairs of leaflets, the leaflets ovate to lanceolate, about 6 cm. long, 1.5 cm. broad, usually crenate-margined, the terminal 3-lobed; umbels sessile or short-pedunculate; involucre of 2 or 3 bracts, or wanting; involucel of 5-8 conspicuous, triangular-lanceolate bractlets, equaling or exceeding the pedicels; rays 15-20, unequal, about 3 cm. long; calyx-teeth obsolete; carpophore entire; fruit broadly oval or oblong-oval, 1-2 mm. long.
Type locality: "In Europa ad ripas tluviorum," collector unknown.
Distribution: Central Europe to northern Africa; introduced on ballast in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and South Carolina.
- bibliographic citation
- Albert Charles Smith, Mildred Esther Mathias, Lincoln Constance, Harold William Rickett. 1944-1945. UMBELLALES and CORNALES. North American flora. vol 28B. New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY