Aquarius cylindricus (Rataj) Christenh. & Byng
Basionym : Echinodorus cylindricus Rataj
Occurrence:
States of Mato Grosso do Sul and Rondônia in Brazil.
Ecology
Grows in the backwaters of rivers (Wanke 1999). At an altitude of approx. 100m.
Morphology General habit
Perennial, from rhizomes, glabrous, up to 130 cm, rhizomes up to 7 cm long, 3 cm diam. Leaves emersed, with bluish-green wax coating, leaf blade lanceolate to elliptic, 5 - 7-veined, 15 - 35 cm long, 4 - 10 cm wide, pellucid markings absent, apex acute, base attenuated, petiole round, 14 - 40 cm long, c. 5 mm wide, base with sheath up to 14 cm long
Morphology Reproductive morphology Fruits
Fruit oblanceoloid, 5-ribbed, keeled, glandular, 3 mm long and 1 mm wide, glands 2, separated by ribs, beak end, erect, c. 0.7 mm.
Morphology Reproductive morphology Inflorescences
Inflorescence racemes or rarely branching in the lowermost whorl, 4 - 13 whorls, each 6 - 9-flowered, erect, protruding leaves, non-propagative, to 40 cm long, c. 4 cm wide, rachis teret, pedicels round, to 80 cm long, 7 mm diam, bracts free, coarse, deltoid, 0.9 - 1.9 cm long and 5 - 8 mm wide, 18 - 30-veined, apex pointed, pedicels spreading into flower and fruit, 0.8 - 1 cm long, 1 mm diam. flowers c. 3.5 cm diam, sepals erect, 25 - 30-veined, c. 6 mm long and c. 4 mm wide, veins without papillae, petals spreading, without claws, overlapping, c. 25 mm long and c. 18 mm wide, stamens 24 - 30, anthers many-sided, c. 2 mm long, filaments c. 2.5 mm long, carpels numerous
Note
Rataj (1975) described this species, but later (Rataj 2004) made it a conspecific with Echinodorus glaucus. However, consistent differences in leaf and inflorescence morphology are considered sufficient to accept two species, although molecular data for this taxon were not available for Lehtonen & Myllys (2008) and the molecular differences between E. glaucus and E. cylindricus are not known.
Phenology
Flowering and fruiting from November to April[1]
- ↑ POWO (2021). "Plants of the World Online. Facilitated by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Published online; http://www.plantsoftheworldonline.org/ Retrieved August 22, 2021."
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 by The New York Botanical Garden (licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)