Potamogeton coloratus

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Potamogeton coloratus
Potamogeton coloratus (8405211888).jpg
Scientific classification edit
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Alismatales
Family: Potamogetonaceae
Genus: Potamogeton
Species:
P. coloratus
Binomial name
Potamogeton coloratus
Hornem.
Synonyms[1]
  • Buccaferrea hornemannii (G.Mey.) Bubani
  • Potamogeton helodes Dumort.
  • Potamogeton hornemannii G.Mey.
  • Potamogeton plantagineus Du Croz ex Roem. & Schult.
  • Potamogeton rufescens subsp. helodes (Dumort.) K.Richt.
  • Potamogeton siculus Tineo ex Guss.
  • Potamogeton subflavus Loret & Barrandon

Potamogeton coloratus, the fen pondweed,[2] is an aquatic plant in the genus Potamogeton. It is found in shallow peaty calcareous lakes, ponds and ditches, commonly associated with lowland fens.

Description[]

Fen pondweed grows from perennial, creeping rhizomes. The leaves are broad, thin and translucent with noticeable reticulate veining.[3] Both floating and submerged leaves are produced but the difference between these is often rather indistinct, rather than the marked dimorphism seen in other pondweeds. Often, the leaves of fen pondweed are simply longer and narrower lower down the stem and shorter and rounder towards its apex; the leaves towards the apex of the stem may be floating but often grow just below the surface, giving the plant a distinctive 'drowned' appearance,[3] as though water levels have recently risen. Submerged leaves are 70–175 mm long and 10–30 mm wide.[3] All leaves have the stalk shorter than the blade, and the submerged leaves are almost sessile.[4] The leaves are typically reddish to brownish in colour.

Flowers are produced in June to July. Like all pondweeds, they are small and greenish, in spikes up to 45 mm long. The fruits of this species are smaller (1.5-1.9 mm long x 1.0-1.3 mm wide) than Broad-leaved pondweed Potamogeton natans and Bog Pondweed Potamogeton polygonifolius.[3][4] Turions are not produced.[3]

Fen pondweed could be confused with other pondweeds, especially bog pondweed P. polygonifolius, to which it is closely related.[5] However, bog pondweed produces completely opaque floating leaves that are very distinct from the submerged leaves; the submerged leaves are longer and die back relatively early in the season. Bog pondweed also lacks the distinctive net-veined appearance. Potamogeton lucens has leaves with a similar net-veined appearance, but is more uniform in its growth habit, has denticulate (finely toothed) leaf margins and stipules with two conspicuous keels.[3]

Potamogeton coloratus is diploid, with 2n=28.[6]

Hybrids have been described with P. berchtoldii (P. × lanceolatus Sm.) and P. gramineus (P. × billupsii Fryer), but both are rare.[3][7]

Taxonomy[]

Fen pondweed was first named by the Danish botanist Jens Wilken Hornemann (1770–1841).[1] The specific epithet means 'coloured', 'dark', or 'tanned'. As this is a fairly distinctive and not very variable species, there are relatively few synonyms.[citation needed]

Distribution[]

Potamogeton coloratus is restricted to Europe (Britain, Ireland, Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, Sweden (Gotland only), France including Corsica, Italy including Sardinia and Sicily, Switzerland, Austria, Hungary, Spain (Balearic Islands) and Portugal),[8] Turkey[9] and extreme North Africa (Morocco, Algeria).[8]

Ecology and Conservation[]

Fen pondweed has rather specialised habitat preferences, occurring predominantly on deep peat with nutrient-poor calcareous water and a strong groundwater influence, such as is commonly found in alkaline fenlands. Within this habitat it occurs predominantly in ponds, ditches and drains, flushes and seeps, and the margins of shallow lakes,[7] in water up to about 1 m deep, often in the company of stoneworts[3] and bladderworts. In central Europe, it forms a distinct community with Chara hispida and the aquatic form of Juncus subnodulosus in oligotrophic, calcium-rich, spring-fed streams[10] and oxbow lakes.[11] It will also grow on marl, sand and clay.[12] In Britain and central Europe[10] it has been lost from many sites due to eutrophication or drainage, and most remaining populations are in nature reserves.[12] However, where it is found it can be abundant, such as on the Anglesey Fens in North Wales. Fen pondweed remains widespread in Ireland.

A study of the genetic diversity of fen pondweed in the managed ditch systems of the Gordano Valley in southwest England showed that genetic diversity increased with distance from the head of the valley. This was interpreted as reflecting population bottlenecks caused by ditch cleaning, and the tendency for dispersal to occur downstream.[13]

Pond snails such as Lymnaea stagnalis may consume fen pondweed, but it is rather unpalatable compared to other aquatic plants.[14]

Globally[7] and in Britain,[15] fen pondweed is considered Least Concern. However, it is a protected feature of several fenland nature reserves in Britain, both in its own right[16] and as a characteristic species of fenland habitat and the Habitats Directive habitats "Hard oligotrophic lakes with Chara" and "Natural eutrophic lakes with Magnopotamion".[17] Effective conservation of this species depends upon protection of its lowland calcareous fenland habitat.

Fen pondweed was formerly extinct in the Czech Republic, but has recently been reestablished from the seed bank following desilting of some of its former habitat.[18] It is considered Endangered in Germany[19] and Switzerland,[20] Vulnerable in the Netherlands[21] and is Near Threatened in Sweden.[7] It is protected in several French administrative regions.[7]

Cultivation[]

Fen pondweed is not in cultivation, and does not seem particularly easy to grow, reflecting its specialist habitat requirements. It would probably need to be grown in a rather deep, peaty but alkaline substrate.[citation needed]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b The Plant List: Potamogeton coloratus. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and Missouri Botanic Gardens. Accessed November 18, 2014
  2. ^ BSBI List 2007 (xls). Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland. Archived from the original (xls) on 2015-06-26. Retrieved 2014-10-17.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Preston C.D. (1995). Pondweeds of Great Britain and Ireland. BSBI Handbook No. 8. Botanical Society of the British Isles, London.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Clapham A.R., Tutin T.G., Warburg E.F. 1962. Flora of the British Isles (2nd Edition). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
  5. ^ Wiegleb G., Kaplan Z. 1998. An account of the species of Potamogeton L. Folia Geobotanica, 33, 241-316
  6. ^ Kaplan Z., Jarolímová V., Fehrer J, 2013. Revision of chromosome numbers of Potamogetonaceae: a new basis for taxonomic and evolutionary implications. Preslia, 85, 421-482.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Lansdown, R.V. 2013. Potamogeton coloratus. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2014.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 01 November 2014.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b Naturhistorika riksmuseet (Sweden) Den virtuella floran: kållnate Potamogeton coloratus Hornem., northern hemisphere range map
  9. ^ Wiegleb G. 1989. On Potamogeton coloratus (Potamogetonaceae) in Turkey. Willdenowia, 19, 121-125.
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b Buchwald R., Carbiener R., Trémolières M. 1995. Synsystematic division and syndynamics of the Potamogeton coloratus community in flowing waters of Southern Central Europe. Acta Botanica Gallica 142, 659-666
  11. ^ Amoros C., Bornette G. 2009. Aquatic vegetation and hydrology of a braided river floodplain. Journal of Vegetation Science, 2, 497-512.
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b Preston C.D., Pearman D.A., Dines T.D. (2002) New Atlas of the British and Irish Flora: An Atlas of the Vascular Plants of Britain, Ireland, the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands. Oxford University Press, Oxford. Online version.
  13. ^ Gornall R.J., Hollingsworth P.M., Preston C.D. 1998. Evidence for spatial structure and directional gene flow in a population of an aquatic plant, Potamogeton coloratus. Heredity, 80, 414-421.
  14. ^ Elger A., Willby N.J. 2003. Leaf dry matter content as an integrative expression of plant palatability: the case of freshwater macrophytes. Functional Ecology, 17, 58-65.
  15. ^ Cheffings C.M., Farrell, L. (Eds), Dines T.D., Jones R.A., Leach S.J., McKean D.R., Pearman D.A., Preston C.D., Rumsey F.J., Taylor I. 2005. The Vascular Plant Red Data List for Great Britain. Species Status, 7, 1-116. Joint Nature Conservation Committee, Peterborough.
  16. ^ Countryside Council for Wales. 2008. Core Management Plan including conservation objectives for Corsydd Môn/ Anglesey Fens SAC. Countryside Council for Wales, Bangor. Available via the internet from Natural Resources Wales
  17. ^ Joint Nature Conservation Committee (JNCC). 2005. Common Standards Monitoring Guidance for Standing Waters. JNCC, Peterborough.
  18. ^ Kaplan Z., Šumberová K., Formanová I., Ducháček M. 2014. Re-establishment of an extinct population of the endangered aquatic plant Potamogeton coloratus. Aquatic Botany, 119, 91-99.
  19. ^ Bundesamt fur Naturschutz: Potamogeton coloratus (in German)
  20. ^ Moser D.M., Gygax A., Bäumler B., Wyler N., Palese R. 2002. Liste rouge des espèces menacées de Suisse. Fougères et plantes à fleurs. Ed. Office fédéral de l’environnement, des forêts et du paysage, Berne; Centre du Réseau Suisse de Floristique, Chambésy; Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève, Chambésy. Série OFEFP «L’environnement pratique». 118 pp.
  21. ^ Sparrius L.B., Odé B., Beringen R. 2014. Basisreport Rode Lijst Vaatplanten 2012 volgens Nederlandse en IUCN-criteria. FLORON Rapport 57. Floron, Nijmegen.

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