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It is a chalk stream which supports large stands of bur-reed.
This bur-reed has thin, flexible, grasslike leaves which float in the water.
It can be distinguished from all other species of bur-reed by the presence of two stigmas.
Tsuruyoshi, a creeping species of the common reed and the branched bur-reed can be found in this area.
Sparganium emersum is a species of flowering plant in the cat-tail family known by the common name European bur-reed.
The common name, bur-reed, arises from the distinctive round clusters of fruits that take the form of a mace.
Sparganium, commonly known as the bur-reed, is a genus of aquatic plants of shallow marshes, ponds and streams.
Small bur-reed (Sparganium minimum)
The lakeshores and other marshes are characterized by emergent plants like prairie bulrush, bur-reed, arrowhead, and spikerush.
San Leng (Sparganium or Bur-Reed)
Sparganium (Bur-reed) is a genus of flowering plants, containing about 20 species in temperate regions of both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres.
The vegetation reported from the Malltraeth Marsh consist of reed canary-grass, water-plantain, branched bur-reed, Club rush and reed sweet-grass.
Sparganium erectum, the simplestem bur-reed or branched bur-reed, is a perennial plant species in the genus Sparganium.
Sparganium eurycarpum is a species of bur-reed known by the common names giant bur-reed and broadfruit bur-reed.
Along the shores are dense stands of Common Reed, Lesser Bulrush, Common Bulrush, and Unbranched Bur-reed.
An inventory in 1998 also documented Chara globularis, Common waterweed, White Water-lily, Yellow water-lily, Branched Bur-reed, Flowering rush, and Stratiotes aloides.
Common Birds-foot Trefoil, Ladys Bedstraw, various small Sedges and Sand Sedge are found on the Machair near Loch Dubh, and Loch na mBreac has a good growth of Common Reed, Branched Bur-Reed and Bulrush.
White water-lily, Downy Birch, Water Soldier, Woody Nightshade, Flatleaf Bladderwort, Small bur-reed, Tufted Loosestrife, Sneezewort, Branched bur-reed, Cowbane (very poisonous), Six-stamened Waterwort, Yellow Flag, Eupatorium.
The larvae bore the stems of Sparganium species.
Perhaps the first mention of Sparganium in the English language was made by William Turner (1562).
The larvae feed on Sparganium and Nuphar lutea.
Sparganium angustifolium is a species of flowering plant in the cat-tail family known by the common name narrowleaf bur-reed.
The leaves are flat and straplike, sometimes with a triangular, keeled base that can help distinguish it from the similar Sparganium angustifolium.
The family consists of only one genus Sparganium of less than two dozen species, perennial plants of wet habitats.
Sparganium androcladum (N)
Sparganium emersum (I)
The older sites are covered with marsh moss, whereas others can be identified by their duckweed, marsh cinquefoil and sparganium growth.
It can form dense stands under the right conditions; for example, Sparganium is one of the four main vegetation types in the Ottawa River, Canada.
The larvae feed on Carex, Sparganium erectum, Iris pseudacorus and Alisma.
San Leng (Sparganium or Bur-Reed)
There are four herbaceous vegetation types, named for the dominant plant species in them: Scirpus, Eleocharis, Sparganium and Typha.
Further, he noted, "the virtues of Sparganium: The roote is good to be geven wyth wyne agaynste the poyson of serpentes."
The larvae feed on Iris pseudacorus, Glyceria maxima, Scirpus lacustris, Sparganium and Typha species.
The Sparganiaceae are closely related to the Typhaceae and the APG III system (2009) includes Sparganium in that family.
Sparganium erectum, the simplestem bur-reed or branched bur-reed, is a perennial plant species in the genus Sparganium.
The genus name Sparganium was published by Linnaeus in Species Plantarum (1753), with two species recognized: S. erectum, and S. natans.
The shores of the Sea of Azov contain numerous limans, estuaries and marshes and are dominated by reeds, sedges, Typha and Sparganium.
By the APG III system of 2009, Sparganium had been found to be fairly closely related to Typha, and so was placed with that genus in family Typhaceae.
Other macrophytes discerned in different zones of the lake include Typho angustata, Phragmites australis, Myriophyllum, Sparganium evectum and Myriophyllum verticillatum, which contribute to the production of macrophites.
Lake Liepāja is a pod-shaped shallow eutrophic coastal lake with extensive areas of emergent vegetation (Phragmites, Typha, Scirpus, Sparganium), surrounded by seasonally flooded meadows and arable land.
The vegetation is mainly of a mosaic of Yellow Iris Iris pseudacorus, branched bur-reed Sparganium erectum and rushes Juncus spp., while Greater Tussock-sedge Carex paniculata is locally dominant.