*** Welcome to piglix ***

Potamogeton berchtoldii

Potamogeton berchtoldii
Potamogeton berchtoldii garden pond.jpg
Shoots of P. berchtoldii growing with milfoil and water crowfoot in a pond
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Monocots
Order: Alismatales
Family: Potamogetonaceae
Genus: Potamogeton
Species: P.berchtoldii
Binomial name
Potamogeton berchtoldii
Fieber
Synonyms

Potamogeton fieberi Rouy Potamogeton groenlandicus Hagstr. Potamogeton lacunatus Hagstr.


Potamogeton fieberi Rouy Potamogeton groenlandicus Hagstr. Potamogeton lacunatus Hagstr.

Potamogeton berchtoldii, common name small pondweed is an aquatic plant.

Small pondweed is a fine-leaved pondweeds with a bushy habit. It lacks a perennial rhizome and the plants die back in winter into a large number of resting buds known as turions. The stems are very slender and do not usually exceed 60 cm. The leaves are flat, usually 25–50 mm long, and less than 2 mm wide, usually with a broad band of lacunae along each side of the midrib and coloured pale green, olive green or brownish green. The open stipules and shining nodal glands can be important characters in identification.

Small pondweed is similar to several other Potamogeton species, especially P. pusillus, and use of a good key such as Preston (1995) is strongly recommended. It could also be confused with P. trichoides and P. obtusifolius.

Hybrids have been described with P. trichoides (P. × franconicus G.Fisch.), P. pusillus (P. × mucronulatus (G.Fisch.) Papch.), P. natans, P. polygonifolius, P. coloratus (P. × lanceolatus Sm.), P. perfoliatus (P. × mysticus Morong), P. natans (P. × variifolius Thore), and P. acutifolius (P. × sudermanicus Hagstr.), but all are rare.

Small pondweed was first named by the German botanist Franz Xaver Fieber in 1838. It is named after the 19th century Czech botanist Friedrich von Berchtold.

This is one of a group of rather similar fine-leaved species that also includes P. pusillus, P. hillii and P. ochreatus. Some authors consider it a form of P. pusillus.


...
Wikipedia

...