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Image of American waterawlwort
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Awlwort

Subularia aquatica L.

Subularia aquatica

provided by wikipedia EN

Subularia aquatica is an aquatic plant in the family Brassicaceae which is known by the common name water awlwort. This is a small herb with awl-like leaves (generally cylindrical but tapering to a sharp point), and growing from a corm above a network of bright white roots. Tiny flowers, each only about a millimeter long, are borne on stalks. Flowers which rise above the surface of the water open, while those that remain submersed stay closed and self-pollinate. The seeds come inside tiny inflated pods. There are two varieties of water awlwort; S. a. var. aquatica is native to Eurasia and S. a. var. americana is native to northern North America. There may also be a Mexican subspecies. This plant grows in ponds, marshes, peat bogs, and other shallow, cold water bodies, often in gravel or sand.

Distribution

Native

Palearctic:
Siberia: West Siberia
Soviet Far East: Kamchatka Oblast
Northern Europe: Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Kaliningrad, Norway, Sweden, United Kingdom
Middle Europe: Belgium, Germany
East Europe: Belarus, Central Russia, Central Black Earth, Northern Russia, North Caucasus, Northwestern Russia, Volga, Urals, Volga-Vyatka
Southeastern Europe: Bulgaria
Southwestern Europe: France, Spain
Nearctic:
Subarctic America: Northwest Territories, Yukon Territory, Greenland, Alaska
Eastern Canada: Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Quebec
Western Canada: British Columbia, Manitoba, Saskatchewan
Northeastern United States: Maine, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont
North-Central United States: Minnesota
Northwestern United States: Idaho, Montana, Washington, Wyoming
Southwestern United States: California, Utah

References

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Subularia aquatica: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Subularia aquatica is an aquatic plant in the family Brassicaceae which is known by the common name water awlwort. This is a small herb with awl-like leaves (generally cylindrical but tapering to a sharp point), and growing from a corm above a network of bright white roots. Tiny flowers, each only about a millimeter long, are borne on stalks. Flowers which rise above the surface of the water open, while those that remain submersed stay closed and self-pollinate. The seeds come inside tiny inflated pods. There are two varieties of water awlwort; S. a. var. aquatica is native to Eurasia and S. a. var. americana is native to northern North America. There may also be a Mexican subspecies. This plant grows in ponds, marshes, peat bogs, and other shallow, cold water bodies, often in gravel or sand.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia EN