Common Name: HORNWORT FAMILY Habit: Perennial herb, submersed aquatic; overwintering on bottom as detached, dense shoot tips (winter buds); roots 0; monoecious; water-pollinated. Stem: flexible with water currents, internodes clustered near tip. Leaf: whorled, generally compound, forked; segments linear, toothed; stipules 0; petiole 1--2 mm, translucent. Inflorescence: reduced axillary cymes generally near shoot tips, +- sessile, 1--several per node, generally staminate below, pistillate above, or sometimes mixed at a node; flowers 1--3 per cyme but appearing to be 1 subtended by calyx-like whorl of 8--15 bracts, bracts linear, leaf-like, fused at base, toothed at tip, persistent in fruit. Flower: unisexual; perianth 0; staminate round-topped, stamens 3--50, spirally arranged, anthers +- sessile, exserted from bracts, pollen shed underwater; pistillate of 1 simple, ovoid pistil, ovary superior, chamber 1; placenta pendulous; style elongate, spine-like, with decurrent groove; stigma pocket-like, at style base; ovule 1. Fruit: achene, tubercled or not, spines 0 or elongate, basal, facial, marginal or stylar; lateral margin winged or not. Genera In Family: 1 genus, 6 species: +- worldwide. eFlora Treatment Author: Donald H. Les Scientific Editor: Thomas J. Rosatti.
Etymology: (Greek: horn leaf, for antler-like appearance) Note:Ceratophyllum grown as ornamental or for oxygen generation in aquaria, garden ponds. Leaves, fruit eaten by migrating waterfowl. Vigorous growth (even of native species) can result in weedy infestations.
Ceratophyllum demersum L.
NATIVE Stem: 1--3+ m, glabrous, limp, suspended by water, brittle, branches 0--3 per node. Leaf: 3--11 per node, 0.8--3 cm; segments 2--4, with 2 rows small teeth distally, 1 multicellular, glandular appendage at tip. Inflorescence: uncommon. Flower: staminate 2--5 mm, stamens pink to +- red; pistillate 1--2 mm, pistil generally +- yellow, margins red-tinged or not, style generally 1 mm. Fruit: 3.5--6 mm (except spines), dark green to red-brown, generally tubercled, base with 2 tubercles or 2 spines, margin spineless, wingless; spines 0.1--12 mm, stiff, bases generally webbed; style persistent on fruit, stiff, erect, 0.5--14 mm. Seed: cotyledons large, fleshy; terminal bud highly developed; first leaves simple, opposite, awl-like. Chromosomes: 2n=24,38,40,48. Ecology: Common. Ditches, lakes, ponds, pools, slow watercourses; water 0.1--4 m deep, fresh to +- brackish, medium to high nutrient levels, acidic to alkaline (pH 5.9--9.4) but generally alkaline (pH > 7); Elevation: generally < 1700 m. Bioregional Distribution: CA (exc CaRF, Teh, ChI, W&I, DMtns); Distribution Outside California: common worldwide. Flowering Time: Jun--Aug Note: Plants self-fertile; populations generally > 50% staminate. Synonyms: Ceratophyllum apiculatum Cham. Unabridged Note: Plants with fruit having basal tubercles instead of spines were named Ceratophyllum apiculatum Cham., but such variants occur commonly and sporadically throughout sp. range and do not merit taxonomic recognition. Jepson eFlora Author: Donald H. Les Index of California Plant Names (ICPN; linked via the Jepson Online Interchange) Previous taxon: Ceratophyllum Next taxon: Acanthaceae
Botanical illustration including Ceratophyllum demersum
Citation for this treatment: Donald H. Les 2012, Ceratophyllum demersum, in Jepson Flora Project (eds.) Jepson eFlora, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=18711, accessed on May 04, 2024.
Citation for the whole project: Jepson Flora Project (eds.) 2024, Jepson eFlora, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/, accessed on May 04, 2024.
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