Familia Alismataceae

ALISMATACEAE

Morphological description

Rhizomatous herbs; exstipulate. Waterplants.

Leaves usually crowded, simple on long petioles, entire, usually laticiferous.

Inflorescence

Usually, umbels arranged in racemes or panicles.

Flowers

Flowers bisexual, actinomorphic, tepals 6 in two rows of 3; ovary superior; stamens many, carpels many.

Fruits

Fruit an achene, achene with a long beak (Echinodorus)

Seeds

Seeds few, usually.

Different from: Hydrocharitaceae: ovary inferior.

Distribution: The family is best represented in the northern hemisphere. In Malesia 4 genera, including Sagittaria, (mainly America, few in Old World); marshy places in lowland.

Notes: Members of the family are always found in marshy places. The corms of Sagittaria sagittifolia are edible.

Literature: C. den Hartog, Fl. Males. I, 5 (1957) 317-334.

Spot characters (Van Balgooy): Bulbils (Alisma, Caldesia), petioles enlarges/swollen at the ends (p.p., Sagittaria), scalariform tertiary venation (Limnocharis, corolla yellow (Limnocharis), fruits muricate, tuberculate or rugose (Caldesiap.p., Sagittaria).

Illustrations in Plant Portrait: Fig. 8. Sagittaria sagittifolia L. subsp. leucopetala (Miq.) Hartog (Alismataceae). Habit; enlarged fruit. Reproduced from Flora Malesiana I, 5 (1957) 333, fig. 11.

Image in PhytoImages for Alismataceae 

 

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