Helanthium tenellum: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
revision of this page, as edited by JustAGal (talk | contribs) at 14:14, 10 July 2013
Undid revision 573129955 by Frze (talk)
Line 13: Line 13:
|binomial_authority = (Martius) Buchenau in Abh. Nat. Ver. Bremen 2:21, 1869
|binomial_authority = (Martius) Buchenau in Abh. Nat. Ver. Bremen 2:21, 1869
|}}
|}}

[[File:Echinodorus isthmicus2.jpg|thumbnail|Echinodorus isthmicus]]


==Common names==
==Common names==


Pygmy chain sword plant
'''Pygmy chain sword plant''', '''Bolivian Sword'''.


==Synonyms==
==Synonyms==


''Alisma tenellus'' Martius; ''Alisma tenellum''; ''Echinodorus naine''; ''Echinodorus parvulus'' [[Engelm.]]; ''Echinodorus tenellus'' [[var.]] ''ecostatus''; ''Echinodorus tenellus'' ([[Mart.]]) [[Buch.]] var. ''latifolius'' ([[Seub.]]) [[Fassett]]{{dn|date=September 2012}}; ''Echinodorus tenellus'' ([[Mart.]]) [[Buch.]] var. ''[[parvulus]]{{dn|date=July 2013}}'' (Engelm.) Fassett; ''Helianthium parvulum'' ([[Engelm.]]) [[Britt.]]; ''Helianthium tenellum'' [[Britt.]]; ''Sagittaria microfolia''.
''Alisma tenellus'' Martius; ''Alisma tenellum''; ''Echinodorus naine''; ''Echinodorus parvulus'' [[Engelm.]]; ''Echinodorus tenellus'' [[var.]] ''ecostatus''; ''Echinodorus tenellus'' ([[Mart.]]) [[Buch.]] var. ''latifolius'' ([[Seub.]]) [[Fassett]]{{dn|date=September 2012}}; ''Echinodorus tenellus'' ([[Mart.]]) [[Buch.]] var. ''[[parvulus]]{{dn|date=July 2013}}'' (Engelm.) Fassett; ''Helianthium parvulum'' ([[Engelm.]]) [[Britt.]]; ''Helianthium tenellum'' [[Britt.]]; ''Sagittaria microfolia''.<ref>{{cite web|title=Synonyms of Echinodorus bolivianus|url=http://aplx5.rdg.ac.uk/annual-checklist/2009/show_species_details.php?record_id=4948677}}</ref>


==Distribution==
==Distribution==
Line 41: Line 43:


Easy to grow in tropical [[aquariums]] or outside in and around [[ponds]] in warmer regions. It will form a mat in good conditions and in plenty of light. Likes a good [[Substrate (aquarium)|substrate]] of small grained gravel / sand. Benefits from additional CO<sub>2</sub>. Ideal for the fore - mid-ground of the [[aquarium]]. Will tolerate lower temperatures than many other [[Echinodorus]], down to at least 68F (20C) or lower. Propagates readily by runners.
Easy to grow in tropical [[aquariums]] or outside in and around [[ponds]] in warmer regions. It will form a mat in good conditions and in plenty of light. Likes a good [[Substrate (aquarium)|substrate]] of small grained gravel / sand. Benefits from additional CO<sub>2</sub>. Ideal for the fore - mid-ground of the [[aquarium]]. Will tolerate lower temperatures than many other [[Echinodorus]], down to at least 68F (20C) or lower. Propagates readily by runners.

== References ==
<references />


==External links==
==External links==
Line 51: Line 56:
* [http://www.tropica.dk/productcard_1.asp?id=067 Tropica]
* [http://www.tropica.dk/productcard_1.asp?id=067 Tropica]
* [http://www.thekrib.com/Plants/Plants/chain-swords.html Krib discussions]
* [http://www.thekrib.com/Plants/Plants/chain-swords.html Krib discussions]



[[Category:Flora of Brazil]]
[[Category:Flora of Brazil]]

Revision as of 09:05, 16 September 2013

Narrow leaf chain sword
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
(unranked):
(unranked):
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
E. tenellus
Binomial name
Echinodorus tenellus
(Martius) Buchenau in Abh. Nat. Ver. Bremen 2:21, 1869
Echinodorus isthmicus

Common names

Pygmy chain sword plant, Bolivian Sword.

Synonyms

Alisma tenellus Martius; Alisma tenellum; Echinodorus naine; Echinodorus parvulus Engelm.; Echinodorus tenellus var. ecostatus; Echinodorus tenellus (Mart.) Buch. var. latifolius (Seub.) Fassett[disambiguation needed]; Echinodorus tenellus (Mart.) Buch. var. parvulus[disambiguation needed] (Engelm.) Fassett; Helianthium parvulum (Engelm.) Britt.; Helianthium tenellum Britt.; Sagittaria microfolia.[1]

Distribution

Echinodorus tenellus is found throughout North, Central, and South America, especially in Southern Brazil and the southern states of North America. It may be the widest-distributed of all the Echinodorus, with the most northerly range.

There may be several different variations, which have at times been given separate taxonomic rank.

It is only rarely found in running water. Normally it is found in wet sand on the shores of pools or in inundated zones of rivers.

Description

The leaves of E. tenellus are narrowly elliptical or lanceolate. At different times during the plant's life cycle, the blade of the leaf is scarcely distinguishable from the petiole, while at other times the petiole is 10 to 15 times as long as the blade, which may be 1-4 cm long and 0.2-1 cm wide, with a pointed tip. The base is decurrent to the petiole and has between one and three veins.

The stem is thin, erect, often curved and radicans, and may be 3-20 cm long. In small plants, the stem ends in a single inflorescence (umbel or coil); in larger plants the inflorescence is racemose, composed of two whorls placed one above the other. Bracts are free and 2-6 mm long in the first whorl. Pedicels are 1-3.5 cm long. Sepals are 3 mm long, membraneous, and usually have five fine ribs. During ripening, the sepals enlarge and reach a length of up to 6 mm and fully cover the aggregate fruit. A specimen may have six to nine stamens, each about 1 mm long. Anthers are 0.25 mm wide by 2.25 mm long, which is three times shorter than the filaments. It may have sixteen to eighteen pistils. The achenes are compressed, and arched in the apical part; they are (0.9) - 1.1 - (1.3) mm long, and black, with three lateral ribs. The basis of the stylar beak is under the level of the tip of the nutlet and may be 0.1-0.3 mm long.

It is a highly variable species according to its geography and environmental conditions.

Cultivation

Easy to grow in tropical aquariums or outside in and around ponds in warmer regions. It will form a mat in good conditions and in plenty of light. Likes a good substrate of small grained gravel / sand. Benefits from additional CO2. Ideal for the fore - mid-ground of the aquarium. Will tolerate lower temperatures than many other Echinodorus, down to at least 68F (20C) or lower. Propagates readily by runners.

References

  1. ^ "Synonyms of Echinodorus bolivianus".

External links