- You are here:
- Simple Key
- Aquatic plants
- Water plants with leaves and stems
- Alisma subcordatum
Alisma subcordatum — southern water-plantain
Copyright: various copyright holders. To reuse an image, please click it to see who you will need to contact.
Facts
Southern water-plantain is found in marshes, ditches, and shallow lakes and streams. The Cherokee used it to make a topical aid for sores, wounds, bruises, swelling, and ulcers, and the Cree took the stem base internally to treat stomach and bowel conditions.
Habitat
Anthropogenic (man-made or disturbed habitats), lacustrine (in lakes or ponds), marshes, riverine (in rivers or streams), shores of rivers or lakes, wetland margins (edges of wetlands)
New England distribution
Adapted from BONAP data
Native: indigenous.
Non-native: introduced (intentionally or unintentionally); has become naturalized.
County documented: documented to exist in the county by evidence (herbarium specimen, photograph). Also covers those considered historical (not seen in 20 years).
State documented: documented to exist in the state, but not documented to a county within the state. Also covers those considered historical (not seen in 20 years).
Note: when native and non-native populations both exist in a county, only native status is shown on the map.
Found this plant? Take a photo and post a sighting.
Characteristics
- Habitat
-
- aquatic
- wetlands
- New England state
-
- Connecticut
- Maine
- Massachusetts
- New Hampshire
- Rhode Island
- Vermont
- Leaf position
- some of the leaves are floating at the surface of the water
- Leaf arrangement
- basal: the leaves are growing only at the base of the plant
- Leaf blade length
- Up to 150 mm
- Petal or sepal number
- there are three petals, sepals, or tepals in the flower
- Petal color
- white
- Specific leaf type
- the leaf is not divided, rather the blade is made up of one segment
- Floating leaf shape
-
- the leaf blade is elliptic (widest near the middle and tapering at both ends)
- the leaf blade is ovate (widest below the middle and broadly tapering at both ends)
- Underwater leaf blade width
- 0 mm
- Fruit type (general)
- the fruit is dry but does not split open when ripe
- Underwater leaf length
- 0 mm
-
Clonal plantlets
- Turion length
- 0 mm
-
Flowers
- Anther color
- there is a noticeable pink, reddish or purplish tint to the anthers
- Anther length
- 0.4–0.6 mm
- Carpels fused
- the carpel is solitary or (if 2 or more) the carpels are not fused to one another
- Flower lower lip length
- 0 mm
- Flower position
-
- the flowers are above the surface of the water
- the flowers are below the surface of the water
- Flower symmetry
- there are two or more ways to evenly divide the flower (the flower is radially symmetrical)
- Inflorescence length
- Up to 1000 mm
- Inflorescence type
- the inflorescence is a panicle (branched, with the individual flowers on stalks)
- Length of peduncle
- Up to 600 mm
- Nectar spur
- the flower has no nectar spurs
- Number of carpels
- At least 3
- Ovary position
- the sepals and/or petals are attached below the ovary
- Palate on corolla
- no
- Petal and sepal arrangement
- the flower includes two cycles of petal- or sepal-like structures
- Petal appearance
- the petals are thin and delicate, and pigmented (colored other than green or brown)
- Petal color
- white
- Petal fringed edges
-
- the petals are fringed
- the petals are not fringed
- Petal hairs on inner/upper surface
- there are no hairs on the inner/upper petal surface
- Petal length
- 1.8–2.5 mm
- Petal number
- 3
- Petal or sepal number
- there are three petals, sepals, or tepals in the flower
- Pistil number
- 6 or more
- Sepal appearance
- the sepals resemble leaves in color and texture
- Sepal length
- 1.5–6 mm
- Sepal number
- 3
- Spur length
- 0 mm
- Stamen number
- 6
- Stamen position relative to petals
- NA
- Stamens fused
- the stamens are not fused to one another
- Stamens fused to petals
- the stamens are not fused to the petals or tepals
- Style length
- 0.2–0.4 mm
- Style number
- 15–20
-
Fruits or seeds
- Fruit length
- 1.5–2.2 mm
- Fruit type (general)
- the fruit is dry but does not split open when ripe
- Fruit type (specific)
- the fruit is an achene (dry, usually 1-seeded, does not separate or split open at maturity)
-
Glands or sap
- Oil glands on nodes
- none of the nodes have oil glands
- Sap
- the sap is milky and opaque, and may be white or colored
-
Growth form
- Lifespan
- the plant lives more than two years
- Root septa
- the roots do not have transverse septa
- Roots floating in water
- there are no clusters of roots floating in the water
- Turions
- there are no turions on the plant
- Underground organs
- the plant has a rhizome (a horizontal underground stem with roots growing from it)
-
Leaves
- Bract position (Sparganium)
- NA
- Bract relative length
- At least 1379 mm
- Bracts
- the flowers or their pedicels have bracts at their bases
- Floating leaf basal lobes
- no
- Floating leaf blade width
- 20–120 mm
- Floating leaf length
- 0 mm
- Floating leaf shape
-
- the leaf blade is elliptic (widest near the middle and tapering at both ends)
- the leaf blade is ovate (widest below the middle and broadly tapering at both ends)
- Floating leaf tip
-
- the tip of the floating leaf blade is acute (sharply pointed)
- the tip of the floating leaf blade is obtuse (bluntly pointed)
- Floral bract form
- the bracts are roughly as lobed as the foliage leaves
- Floral bract length
- Up to 10 mm
- Leaf arrangement
- basal: the leaves are growing only at the base of the plant
- Leaf blade length
- Up to 150 mm
- Leaf blade veins
- the lateral veins are parallel or slightly arched in the direction of the tip
- Leaf blade width
- 20–120 mm
- Leaf position
- some of the leaves are floating at the surface of the water
- Leaf special features
- none of the mentioned special features are present
- Leaf-like branch segments
- 0
- Leaf-like branch shape
- NA
- Specific leaf type
- the leaf is not divided, rather the blade is made up of one segment
- Staminate bract edge (Myriophyllum)
- NA
- Stipule appearance
- NA
- Stipule fused to leaf
- NA
- Stipules
- there are no stipules on the plant
- Stipules fused around stem
- NA
- Trap-bladder length
- 0 mm
- Underwater leaf blade edges
- NA
- Underwater leaf blade shape
- NA
- Underwater leaf blade veins
- 0
- Underwater leaf blade width
- 0 mm
- Underwater leaf length
- 0 mm
- Underwater leaf stalk
- NA
- Underwater leaf stalk length
- 0 mm
- Underwater leaf tip shape
- NA
- Veins in floating leaf
- 0
-
Place
- Habitat
-
- aquatic
- wetlands
- New England state
-
- Connecticut
- Maine
- Massachusetts
- New Hampshire
- Rhode Island
- Vermont
- Specific habitat
-
- edges of wetlands
- in lakes or ponds
- in rivers or streams
- man-made or disturbed habitats
- marshes
- shores of rivers or lakes
-
Stem, shoot, branch
- Flowering stem growth form
- the flowering stem is upright
Wetland status
Occurs only in wetlands. (Wetland indicator code: OBL)
In New England
Distribution
- Connecticut
- present
- Maine
- present
- Massachusetts
- present
- New Hampshire
- present
- Rhode Island
- present
- Vermont
- present
Conservation status
Exact status definitions can vary from state to state. For details, please check with your state.
- Massachusetts
- widespread (S-rank: S5)
From Flora Novae Angliae dichotomous key
2. Alisma subcordatum Raf. N
southern water-plantain. Alisma plantago-aquatica L. var. parviflorum (Pursh) Torr.; A. plantago-aquatica L. ssp. subcordatum (Raf.) Hultén • CT, MA, ME, NH, RI, VT. Marshes, muddy shorelines, ditches, and shallow, circumneutral to slightly basic water of lakes and slow-moving streams.
Native to North America?
Yes
Sometimes confused with
- Alisma triviale:
- petals conspicuously longer than the sepals and fruits 1.8-3 mm long (vs. A. subcordatum, with petals +/- as long as the sepals and fruits 1.5-2.2 mm long).
Synonyms
- Alisma plantago-aquatica L. ssp. subcordatum (Raf.) Hultén
- Alisma plantago-aquatica L. var. parviflorum (Pursh) Torr.