APONOGETONACEAE [Draft]

水蕹科  shui yong ke

Guo Youhao (郭友好)[1]; Robert R. Haynes[2]; C. Barre Hellquist[3]

Herbs, perennial, freshwater aquatic. Rhizome tuberous, with fibrous roots. Leaves submerged and/or floating, basal, long petiolate, broadly elliptic to linear, with few primary veins and numerous transverse secondary veins, sheathed at base. Inflorescence usually a simple or 2-forked terminal spike; spathe present, but usually very early caducous. Flowers hermaphroditic or unisexual. Perianth segments 1–3 or rarely absent, white, yellow, mauve, or bluish violet, often petaloid, persistent. Stamens 6 to many; filaments elongated, free, filiform or flattened; anthers extrose, 2-celled; opening by longitudinal slits. Carpels 3–6(–8), free or slightly united near base; ovary superior; style short; ovules 2–8 per carpel. Fruit a whorl of follicles. Seeds without endosperm; embryo straight.

Monogeneric: widely distributed in the tropical and subtropical parts of the Old World, but most numerous in tropical S Africa, Madagascar, India, Papua New Guinea, and  northern Australia; only one species in China.

1. APONOGETON Linnaeus f., Suppl. Pl. 32, 214. 1782, nom. cons.

水蕹属  shui yong

The description and distribution as for the family.

1. Aponogeton lakhonensis A. Camus, Notul. Syst. 1: 273. 1910 [or 1909?? – 1910 in IPNI].

水蕹  shui yong

Aponogeton pygmaeus Krause; A. taiwanensis Masamune.

Rhizome obovoid or elongated, to 2 cm, often with filament remnant of sheath. Petiole 9–15 cm in submerged leaves and 40–60 cm in floating leaves; leaf blade narrowly ovate to linear, 4–6 × 1–2 cm, herbaceous, with primary veins at base 7–9, base cordate or rounded, margin entire, apex rounded or with a blunt tip, Inflorescence to ca. 5 cm, pedunculate. Flowers bisexual. Perianth segments 2, yellow, slightly obovate, ca. 2 mm. Stamens 6, filaments broadened toward base. Carpels slightly united near base, with 4–6 ovules per carpel. Fruit ovoid, 2–3 mm, with a short terminal beak. Fl. Apr–Oct.

Paddy fields, ponds, streams. Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, Jiangxi, Yunnan, Zhejiang (Longquan) [Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam].

The specimens of this species were incorrectly named Aponogeton natans, but the latter has reddish or purple flowers, filaments not broadened, and a longer beak. The relationship between A. lakhonensis and A. natans needs to be further studied.

 



[1] Herbarium of Wuhan University, Department of Biology, Wuchang, Hubei, People’s Republic of China

[2] Herbarium, Biological Sciences, Biodiversity and Systematics Department, University of Alabama, Box 870345, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0345, U.S.A.

[3] Department of Biology, Massachusetts College of  Liberal Arts, North Adams, Massachusetts 01247-4100, U.S.A.