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- Nuphar microphylla
Nuphar microphylla — small-leaved pond-lily
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Facts
Small-leaved pond-lily is found in much of New England, but is uncommon in some states. Ironically, broad-spectrum herbicides used to eradicate invasive aquatic weeds could be an important danger to this species where it occurs.
Habitat
Lacustrine (in lakes or ponds), riverine (in rivers or streams)
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.
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Characteristics
- Habitat
- aquatic
- New England state
-
- Connecticut
- Maine
- Massachusetts
- New Hampshire
- Vermont
- Leaf position
-
- some of the leaves are floating at the surface of the water
- the leaves are all submerged underwater
- Leaf arrangement
- alternate: there is one leaf per node along the stem
- Leaf blade length
- 35–130 mm
- Petal or sepal number
-
- there are five petals, sepals, or tepals in the flower
- there are seven or more petals, sepals, or tepals in the flower
- Petal color
- yellow
- 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)
- Underwater leaf blade width
- 35–85 mm
- Fruit type (general)
- the fruit is fleshy
- Underwater leaf length
- 35–130 mm
-
Clonal plantlets
- Turion length
- 0 mm
-
Flowers
- Anther length
- 1–3 mm
- Carpels fused
- the carpels are fused to one another
- Flower lower lip length
- 0 mm
- Flower number
- 1
- Flower position
- the flowers are above the surface of the water
- Flower symmetry
- there are two or more ways to evenly divide the flower (the flower is radially symmetrical)
- Inflorescence type
- the inflorescence has only one flower on it
- Inflorescence width
- 10–20 mm
- Length of flower stalk
- 0 mm
- Nectar spur
- the flower has no nectar spurs
- Number of carpels
- 3–35
- 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
- NA
- Petal color
- yellow
- Petal fringed edges
- the petals are not fringed
- Petal fusion
- the perianth parts are separate
- Petal hairs on inner/upper surface
- there are no hairs on the inner/upper petal surface
- Petal number
- At least 8
- Petal or sepal number
-
- there are five petals, sepals, or tepals in the flower
- there are seven or more petals, sepals, or tepals in the flower
- Pistil number
- 1
- Sepal appearance
- the sepals resemble petals in color and texture
- Sepal length
- 10–25 mm
- Sepal number
- 5
- Sepals fused only to sepals
- the sepals are separate from one another
- Spur length
- 0 mm
- Stamen number
- 13 or more
- Stamen position relative to petals
- NA
- Stamens fused to petals
- the stamens are not fused to the petals or tepals
- Style length
- 0 mm
- Style number
- 0
-
Fruits or seeds
- Fruit length
- 10–20 mm
- Fruit type (general)
- the fruit is fleshy
- Fruit type (specific)
- the fruit is a berry (fleshy, with the wall enclosing one or more sections, with two or more seeds)
- Fruit width
- 2–5 mm
-
Glands or sap
- Oil glands on nodes
- none of the nodes have oil glands
- Sap
- the sap is clear and watery
-
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 3854 mm
- Bracts
- neither the flowers nor their pedicels have bracts
- Floating leaf basal lobes
- yes
- Floating leaf blade width
- 35–85 mm
- Floating leaf length
- 35–100 mm
- Floating leaf shape
- the leaf blade is elliptic (widest near the middle and tapering at both ends)
- Floating leaf tip
-
- the tip of the floating leaf blade is obtuse (bluntly pointed)
- the tip of the floating leaf blade is rounded, with no point
- Floral bract form
- NA
- Floral bract length
- 0 mm
- Leaf arrangement
- alternate: there is one leaf per node along the stem
- Leaf blade length
- 35–130 mm
- Leaf blade veins
- the lateral veins radiate from the base and continue to spread away from the centerline of the leaf, or branch off the central vein at intervals
- Leaf blade width
- 35–85 mm
- Leaf position
-
- some of the leaves are floating at the surface of the water
- the leaves are all submerged underwater
- 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
- the underwater leaf has smooth edges, without teeth
- Underwater leaf blade shape
-
- the underwater leaf blade is elliptic (widest near the middle and tapering at both ends)
- the underwater leaf blade is ovate (widest below the middle and broadly tapering at both ends)
- Underwater leaf blade width
- 35–85 mm
- Underwater leaf length
- 35–130 mm
- Underwater leaf stalk
- yes
- Underwater leaf tip shape
-
- the tip of the underwater leaf is obtuse (bluntly pointed)
- the tip of the underwater leaf is rounded, with no point
-
Place
- Habitat
- aquatic
- New England state
-
- Connecticut
- Maine
- Massachusetts
- New Hampshire
- Vermont
- Specific habitat
-
- in lakes or ponds
- in rivers or streams
-
Stem, shoot, branch
- Flowering stem growth form
-
- the flowering stem is upright
- the flowering stem trails along the substrate, or floats in the water
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
- absent
- Vermont
- present
Conservation status
Exact status definitions can vary from state to state. For details, please check with your state.
- Connecticut
- historical (S-rank: SH), special concern, extirpated (code: SC*)
- Massachusetts
- extremely rare (S-rank: S1), endangered (code: E)
- New Hampshire
- historical (S-rank: SH), endangered (code: E)
From Flora Novae Angliae dichotomous key
2. Nuphar microphylla (Pers.) Fern. N
small-leaved pond-lily. Nuphar minima (Willd.) Sm.; Nymphaea microphylla Pers. • CT, MA, ME, NH, VT; also reported for RI by Magee and Ahles (1999), but specimens are unknown. Circumneutral to basic water of lakes and slow-moving streams.
2×3. Nuphar microphylla × Nuphar variegata → Nuphar ×rubrodisca Morong is an infrequent hybrid of circumneutral to basic water. It is known from CT, MA, ME, NH, VT. It has been treated as a species, but it shows morphological intermediacy, poor fruit set, and lower pollen viability than other sympatric species (Padgett et al. 1998). It resembles N. microphylla in some key characteristics (e.g., short sepals, fruit constricted below stigmatic disk, anthers predominantly shorter than filaments). The hybrid is characterized by 5 or 6 sepals per flower, anthers (2–) 3–6 mm long, stigmatic disk with 8–15 stigmatic rays that terminate 0–1.6 mm from the margin, each ray separated by a shallow sinus, the constriction below the stigmatic disk 5–10 mm in diameter, petals and stamens usually persistent as remnants at the base of the fruit, and basal sinus of leaf blade 39–59 (–62)% of the length of the blade midrib (vs. sepals 5 per flower, anthers 1–3 mm long, stigmatic disk with 6–11 stigmatic rays that terminate 0–0.2 mm from the margin, each ray separated by a relatively deep sinus, the constriction below the stigmatic disk 1.5–5 mm in diameter, petals and stamens promptly deciduous, and basal sinus of leaf blade (42–) 54–90% in N. microphylla).
Native to North America?
Yes
Sometimes confused with
- Nuphar advena:
- sepals 2.5–5 cm long, numbering 6 per flower, anthers longer than the filaments, fruit only slightly constricted below the green or rarely red stigmatic disk, and basal sinus of leaf blade mostly 30–59 of the length of the blade midrib (vs. N. microphylla, with sepals 1–2.5 cm long, numbering 5 per flower, anthers predominantly shorter than the filaments, fruit strongly constricted below the red stigmatic disk, and basal sinus of leaf blade mostly 54–90% of the length of the blade midrib).
Synonyms
- Nuphar minima (Willd.) Sm.
- Nymphaea microphylla Pers.