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- Ruppia maritima
Ruppia maritima — beaked ditch-grass, widgeongrass
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Facts
Beaked ditch-grass can tolerate a wide range of salinities, from brackish water to sea-water. It is highly nutritous and an important food plant for waterfowl.
Habitat
Lacustrine (in lakes or ponds), intertidal, subtidal or open ocean, 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.
Found this plant? Take a photo and post a sighting.
Characteristics
- Habitat
-
- aquatic
- wetlands
- New England state
-
- Connecticut
- Maine
- Massachusetts
- New Hampshire
- Rhode Island
- Leaf position
- the leaves are all submerged underwater
- Leaf arrangement
- alternate: there is one leaf per node along the stem
- Leaf blade length
- 60–105 mm
- Petal or sepal number
- there are no petals, sepals, or tepals in the flower, or they are not clearly present
- Petal color
- NA
- Specific leaf type
- the leaf is not divided, rather the blade is made up of one segment
- Floating leaf shape
- NA
- Underwater leaf blade width
- 0.3–0.5 mm
- Fruit type (general)
- the fruit is fleshy
- Underwater leaf length
- 60–105 mm
-
Clonal plantlets
- Turion length
- 0 mm
-
Flowers
- Anther color
- there is a noticeable pink, reddish or purplish tint to the anthers
- 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 number
- 2–20
- Flower position
- the flowers are below the surface of the water
- Flower symmetry
- NA
- Inflorescence type
- the inflorescence is a spike (a long unbranched stem with flowers along it that lack stalks)
- Length of peduncle
- 0.5–16.5 mm
- Nectar spur
- the flower has no nectar spurs
- Number of carpels
- 4
- Ovary position
- NA
- Palate on corolla
- NA
- Petal and sepal arrangement
- the flower includes neither petals nor sepals
- Petal appearance
- NA
- Petal color
- NA
- Petal fringed edges
- NA
- Petal fusion
- NA
- Petal hairs on inner/upper surface
- NA
- Petal length
- 0 mm
- Petal number
- 0
- Petal or sepal number
- there are no petals, sepals, or tepals in the flower, or they are not clearly present
- Pistil number
-
- 4
- 5
- 6 or more
- Sepal appearance
- NA
- Sepal length
- 0 mm
- Sepal number
- 0
- Sepals fused only to sepals
- NA
- Spur length
- 0 mm
- Stamen number
- 1 or 2
- Stamen position relative to petals
- NA
- Stamens fused
- the stamens are not fused to one another
- Stamens fused to petals
-
- NA
- the stamens are not fused to the petals or tepals
- Style number
- 4–8
-
Fruits or seeds
- Fruit beak length
- 0.6–1 mm
- Fruit length
- 1.8–2 mm
- Fruit type (general)
- the fruit is fleshy
- Fruit type (specific)
- the fruit is a drupe (fleshy, with a firm inner ovary wall that encloses a single seed)
- Fruit width
- 0.7–1.5 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
- there are only slender roots on the plant
-
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
- NA
- Floating leaf blade width
- 0 mm
- Floating leaf length
- 0 mm
- Floating leaf shape
- NA
- Floating leaf tip
- NA
- Floral bract form
- NA
- Floral bract length
- 0 mm
- Leaf arrangement
- alternate: there is one leaf per node along the stem
- Leaf blade length
- 60–105 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
- 0.3–0.5 mm
- Leaf position
- 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
- the stipules are delicate and translucent
- Stipule fused to leaf
- the stipules are attached to the leaf blade for some part of their length
- Stipules
- the plant has stipules
- Stipules fused around stem
- the stipules do not forma closed tube around the stem
- Trap-bladder length
- 0 mm
- Underwater leaf blade edges
- the underwater leaf blade edges are toothed
- Underwater leaf blade shape
- the underwater leaf blade is linear (very narrow with more or less parallel sides)
- Underwater leaf blade veins
- 1
- Underwater leaf blade width
- 0.3–0.5 mm
- Underwater leaf length
- 60–105 mm
- Underwater leaf stalk
- no
- Underwater leaf stalk length
- 0 mm
- Underwater leaf tip shape
- the tip of the underwater leaf is obtuse (bluntly pointed)
- Veins in floating leaf
- 0
-
Place
- Habitat
-
- aquatic
- wetlands
- New England state
-
- Connecticut
- Maine
- Massachusetts
- New Hampshire
- Rhode Island
- Specific habitat
-
- in lakes or ponds
- in rivers or streams
- intertidal, subtidal or open ocean
-
Stem, shoot, branch
- Flowering stem growth form
- 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
- present
- Vermont
- absent
Conservation status
Exact status definitions can vary from state to state. For details, please check with your state.
- Maine
- unranked (S-rank: SNR)
- Massachusetts
- fairly widespread (S-rank: S4S5)
From Flora Novae Angliae dichotomous key
1. Ruppia maritima L. N
beaked ditch-grass. Ruppia maritima L. var. longipes Hagstr.; R. maritima L. var. obliqua (Schur) Aschers. & Graebn.; R. maritima L. var. rostrata Agardh; R. maritima L. var. subcapitata Fern. & Wieg. • CT, MA, ME, NH, RI; also reported from VT by Magee and Ahles (1999), but specimens are unknown. Saline to brackish waters and pools.
Native to North America?
Yes
Sometimes confused with
- Zannichellia palustris:
- leaves opposite, mature fruits borne on stalks 0.3-1.2 mm long, and stigma funnelform (vs. R. maritima, with leaves alternate to subopposite, mature fruits borne on stalks 12-19 mm long, and stigma capitate).
Synonyms
- Ruppia maritima var. longipes Hagstr.
- Ruppia maritima var. obliqua (Schur) Aschers. & Graebn.
- Ruppia maritima var. rostrata Agardh
- Ruppia maritima var. subcapitata Fern. & Wieg.