Comments
provided by eFloras
We have seen only one collection of Eleocharis retroflexa from the flora area (Mobile, Alabama, in 1896, US). Other populations are likely in the United States Gulf States. The broad-shouldered, strongly sculptured achenes, trilobed, decurrent tubercles, and basal spikelets are distinctive.
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- Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO, 63110 USA
Description
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Plants annual, tufted, mat-forming, often stoloniferous, sometimes entirely vegetative; rhizomes absent. Culms erect, ascending or arching, pentagonal, sulcate, 1.5–10 cm × 0.2–0.3 mm [larger], soft. Leaves: distal leaf sheaths persistent or disintegrating, pale brown to green, red-spotted [mostly red-brown], membranous; apex acuminate. Spikelets: basal spikelets usually present, bisexual; often proliferous, ellipsoid or obovoid, laterally compressed, 1.7–3.9 × 1.2–2 mm, apex acute; proximal scale empty or with a flower, deciduous, amplexicaulous, similar to floral scales (sometimes 2.4–2.9 mm); subproximal scale with a flower; floral scales clearly distichous, 2–6 [or more], 4–6 per mm of rachilla, pale brown [marked red-brown], ovate or elliptic, 1.8–2.5 × 0.8–1.4 mm, membranous, apex rounded to obtuse, midribs green, keeled. Flowers: perianth bristles 6, colorless or pale brown, shorter than achenes; spinules not evident at 45X; stamens 3; anthers (0.55–)0.7 mm; styles 3-fid. Achenes stramineous (to cream), obovoid, trigonous or subterete, not compressed, angles prominent, 0.8 × 0.5–0.55 mm, apex not constricted proximal to tubercle, coarsely cancellate or honeycomb-reticulate at 10–15X. Tubercles red-brown, pyramidal, trigonous, proximally clearly to obscurely 3-lobed, lobes decurrent on achene angles, 0.3–0.35 × 0.3–0.4 mm.
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Distribution
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Ala.; Mexico; West Indies; Bermuda; Central America; South America; Asia (including Indonesia); Pacific Islands; Australia.
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Flowering/Fruiting
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Fruiting summer.
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Habitat
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Freshwater ponds, stream banks, marshes, sandy or muddy soils; 0–10m.
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Synonym
provided by eFloras
Scirpus retroflexus Poiret in J. Lamarck et al., Encycl. 6: 753. 1804; Baeothryon retroflexum A. Dietrich; Chaetocyperus niveus Liebmann; C. polymorphus Lindley & Nees var. depauperatus Nees; C. rugulosus Nees; C. viviparus Liebmann; Cyperus depauperatus Vahl; Eleocharis depauperata Kunth
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Comprehensive Description
provided by North American Flora
Eleocharis retroflexa (Poir.) Urban, Symb. Ant 2 : 165. 1900.
Scirpus retroflexus Poir. in Lam. Encyc. 6: 753. 1804. (Puerto Rico.) Cyperus depauperatus Vahl, Enum. 2: 305. 1805. (West Indies.) Baeothryon retroflexum A. Dietr. Sp. PI. 2 : 93. 1833. Eleocharis depauperata Kunth, Enum. PI. 2 : 140. 1837.
Chaetocyperus polymorphus var. « depauperatus Nees in Mart. Fl. Bras. 2^: 94. 1842. Chaetocyperus niveus Liebm. Vidensk. Selsk. Skr. V. 2: 242. 1851. (Probably from Costa Rica.) Chaetocyperus viviparus Liebm. Vidensk. Selsk. Skr. V. 2: 242. 1851. (Nicaragua.) Chaetocyperus rugulosus Nees, Bonplandia 3: 86. 1855. (Panama.)
Eleocharis Chaetaria sensu Britton, Jour. N. Y. Micr. Soc. 5 : 105. 1889. Not E. Chaetaria R. & S. 1817.
Cespitose, often proliferous annual (?) with fibrous roots ; culms green, filiform, usually recurved, 2-2.5 cm. long, flattened to deeply quadrangular-sulcate, obscurely punctate ; sheath stramineous to reddish, obtuse, scarious and inflated at the summit; spikelets fewto manyflowered, the scales usually spreading in fruit; scales green, keeled, obtuse to acute, often with chestnut to reddish-brown sides; style trifid; achene 1.0-1.2 mm. long, trigonous, cancellate, costate, obovoid to urceolate, white or stramineous; style-base light brown, as wide and one-third as long as the body of the achene, pyramidal-acuminate, the angles decurrent
on the costae of the achene ; bristles white, shorter than the achene.
Type locality : Puerto Rico.
Distribution: Alabama; West Indies; Central America from British Honduras southward; Colombia ; Venezuela ; Dutch Guiana ; Brazil.
- bibliographic citation
- Henry Knut Svenson. 1957. (POALES); (CYPERACEAE); SCIRPEAE (CONTINUATIO). North American flora. vol 18(9). New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY