View source for Hippuris ← Hippuris You do not have permission to edit this page, for the following reason: The action you have requested is limited to users in the group: Users. You can view and copy the source of this page. {{Treatment/ID |accepted_name=Hippuris |accepted_authority=Linnaeus |publications={{Treatment/Publication |title=Sp. Pl. |place=1: 4. 1753 |year=1753 }} |common_names=Mare’s tail |basionyms= |synonyms= |hierarchy=Plantaginaceae;Hippuris |hierarchy_nav=<div class="higher-taxa"><div class="higher-taxon"><small>family</small>[[Plantaginaceae]]</div><div class="higher-taxon"><small>genus</small>[[Hippuris]]</div></div> |etymology=Greek hippos, horse, and oura, tail, alluding to appearance of stem and leaves |volume=Volume 17 |mention_page=page 5, 11, 12, 56 |treatment_page=page 55 }}<!-- --><span class="statement" id="st-undefined" data-properties=""><b>Herbs,</b> perennial; rhizomatous, emergent aquatics in fresh or brackish water. <b>Stems</b> erect, glabrous. <b>Leaves</b> cauline, whorled; petiole absent; blade not fleshy, not leathery (fleshy or leathery in <i>H. tetraphylla</i>), margins entire. <b>Inflorescences</b> axillary, flowers solitary; bracts absent. <b>Pedicels</b> present (proximal) or absent (distal); bracteoles absent. <b>Flowers</b> bisexual or unisexual; calyx a minute rim adhering to summit of inferior ovary; petals 0; stamen 1, adnate to ovary, filaments glabrous; staminode 0; ovary 1-locular, placentation apical; stigma linear along surfaces of style. <b>Fruits</b> drupes. <b>Seeds</b> 1, brownish, globular, wings absent. <b>x</b> = 8.</span><!-- -->{{Treatment/Body |distribution=North America;South America;Eurasia;introduced in Australia. |discussion=<p>Species 4 (4 in the flora).</p><!-- --><p>Leaf characteristics of <i>Hippuris</i> used here are derived from whorls on the emergent portions of the stems; morphology of submerged leaves differs sharply from that of emergent shoots.</p><!-- --><p>M. E. McCully and H. M. Dale (1961) proposed that the taxa treated below all could be expressions of phenotypic plasticity of <i>Hippuris vulgaris</i> developed in different regimes of salts and photoperiod; this was not accepted by E. Hultén (1973), nor is it accepted here. Number of leaves in a whorl varies among plants and even on the same stem. Nevertheless, there are clear limits and discontinuities in leaf number and shape among taxa, which are well-correlated with less variable characters as well as with ecology and geography.</p><!-- --><p><i>Hippuris</i> has been placed in Halagoraceae or in Hippuridaceae as a monogeneric family. Molecular phylogenetic studies now place it in Plantaginaceae (D. C. Albach et al. 2005).</p> |tables= |references={{Treatment/Reference |id=mccully1961a |text=McCully, M. E. and H. M. Dale. 1961. Heterophylly in Hippuris, a problem in identification. Canad. J. Bot. 39: 1099–1116. }} }}<!-- --><div class="treatment-key"> ==Key== <div class="treatment-key-group"> {| class="wikitable fna-keytable" |-id=key-0-1 |1 |Flowers unisexual; leaves 2–10 mm, midveins often conspicuous, lateral veins absent; stems 15–100 mm; rhizomes 1 mm diam. |[[Hippuris montana|Hippuris montana]] |-id=key-0-1 |1 |Flowers bisexual; leaves 3–35 mm, midveins inconspicuous, lateral veins present, sometimes obscure; stems 80–500 mm; rhizomes (2–)3–7 mm diam. |[[#key-0-2| > 2]] |-id=key-0-2 |2 |Leaves on mid portions of emergent shoots in whorls of (7 or)8 or 9(–12), tips often curled in dried plants; filaments longer than anthers. |[[Hippuris vulgaris|Hippuris vulgaris]] |-id=key-0-2 |2 |Leaves on mid portions of emergent shoots in whorls of 3–6(or 7), tips not curled in dried plants; filaments equal to or shorter than anthers. |[[#key-0-3| > 3]] |-id=key-0-3 |3 |Leaves on mid portions of emergent shoots in whorls of (5 or)6(or 7), linear to narrowly oblong or lanceolate, 0.5–1.5 mm wide, apices subacute. |[[Hippuris lanceolata|Hippuris lanceolata]] |-id=key-0-3 |3 |Leaves on mid portions of emergent shoots in whorls of 3–5(or 6), oblanceolate or oblong to broadly obovate, 2–8 mm wide, apices obtuse, rounded, or blunt. |[[Hippuris tetraphylla|Hippuris tetraphylla]] |} </div></div><!-- -->{{#Taxon: name=Hippuris |author=Reidar Elven;David F. Murray;Heidi Solstad |authority=Linnaeus |rank=genus |parent rank=family |synonyms= |basionyms= |family=Plantaginaceae |illustrator=Yevonn Wilson-Ramsey |illustration copyright=Flora of North America Association |distribution=North America;South America;Eurasia;introduced in Australia. |reference=mccully1961a |publication title=Sp. Pl. |publication year=1753 |special status= |source xml=https://bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation/src/2e0870ddd59836b60bcf96646a41e87ea5a5943a/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V17/V17_165.xml |genus=Hippuris }}<!-- -->[[Category:Treatment]][[Category:Plantaginaceae]] Templates used on this page: Template:Plantaginaceae (view source) Template:Treatment/AuthorLink (view source) Template:Treatment/Body (view source) Template:Treatment/Body/Maps (view source) Template:Treatment/ID (view source) Template:Treatment/Publication (view source) Template:Treatment/Reference (view source) Return to Hippuris.