Harman Patil (Editor)

Sagittaria lancifolia

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Kingdom
  
Family
  
Scientific name
  
Sagittaria lancifolia

Order
  
Genus
  
Rank
  
Species

Sagittaria lancifolia gceltermarsciugaedupublictaxonomySagittaria

Similar
  
Broadleaf arrowhead, Sagittaria, Panicum hemitomon, Sagittaria graminea, Alismataceae

Duck potato sagittaria lancifolia


Sagittaria lancifolia, the bulltongue arrowhead, is a perennial, monocot plant in the family Alismataceae, genus Sagittaria, with herbaceous growth patterns. It is native to the southeastern United States. It is known from every coastal state from Delaware to Texas. The species is also considered native to Mexico, Central America, the West Indies and northern South America. It has become naturalized on the Island of Java in Indonesia.

Contents

Sagittaria lancifolia Sagittaria lancifolia Wikipedia

A common name is "duck potato" because of the large potato-like corms which can form underground.

Description

Sagittaria lancifolia Plants North Carolina Native Plant Society

The plant is conspicuous for its large, lance-shaped leaves which grow up from underground rhizomes and its showy, white three-petaled flowers which form at the end of long, thick stalks. Each flower has three green sepals, three white or pink-tinged petals, at least six stamens, and pistils which may be in separate flowers. The plant likes to grow in fresh or brackish water and is commonly found in ditches, marshes, swamps and along the shores of lakes and streams.

Sagittaria lancifolia Plant gallery

Sagittaria lancifolia reproduces both asexually through spreading rhizomes and sexually through reproduction of copious achenes, a dry fruit each of which carries a single seed. The achenes are dispersed through animal vectors and through hydrochory (dispersal through wind, water, or gravity). The achenes germinate only under light, and with or without available fluid, but the period of their germination is shorter when they are submersed in water. Temperature is a factor, with 100% germination occurring at 20 °C (68 °F). Germination is reduced in anaerobic conditions. Growth is also dependent on temperature.

Sensitivity to in-situ burning of applied crude oil

Sagittaria lancifolia Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER

Louisiana is one of the top five U.S. states in oil production, oil that is piped through marshes in Louisiana to market and sometimes leaks into the marsh land polluting it. Field studies suggest that, although the application and burning of South Louisiana Crude oil on Sagittaria l. plants in plots of fresh Louisiana marsh land had short term negative effects on the growth rate of Sagittaria l., over time plant recovery was just as rapid as in the plots where the plants were oiled but not burned. This suggests that allowing a polluted marsh to degrade and recover without burning is a viable option, while burning is a viable option when a rapid recovery is needed on sensitive lands.

Sagittaria lancifolia Florida Native Plant Society

Sagittaria lancifolia Duck potato Sagittaria lancifolia

References

Sagittaria lancifolia Wikipedia