• Source: Subularia aquatica
  • Subularia aquatica is an aquatic plant in the family Brassicaceae which is known by the common name water awlwort. This is a small herb with awl-like leaves (generally cylindrical but tapering to a sharp point), and growing from a corm above a network of bright white roots. Tiny flowers, each only about a millimeter long, are borne on stalks. Flowers which rise above the surface of the water open, while those that remain submersed stay closed and self-pollinate. The seeds come inside tiny inflated pods. There are two varieties of water awlwort; S. a. var. aquatica is native to Eurasia and S. a. var. americana is native to northern North America. There may also be a Mexican subspecies. This plant grows in ponds, marshes, peat bogs, and other shallow, cold water bodies, often in gravel or sand.


    Distribution


    Native

    Palearctic:
    Siberia: West Siberia
    Soviet Far East: Kamchatka Oblast
    Northern Europe: Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Kaliningrad, Norway, Sweden, United Kingdom
    Middle Europe: Belgium, Germany
    East Europe: Belarus, Central Russia, Central Black Earth, Northern Russia, North Caucasus, Northwestern Russia, Volga, Urals, Volga-Vyatka
    Southeastern Europe: Bulgaria
    Southwestern Europe: France, Spain
    Nearctic:
    Subarctic America: Northwest Territories, Yukon Territory, Greenland, Alaska
    Eastern Canada: Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Quebec
    Western Canada: British Columbia, Manitoba, Saskatchewan
    Northeastern United States: Maine, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont
    North-Central United States: Minnesota
    Northwestern United States: Idaho, Montana, Washington, Wyoming
    Southwestern United States: California, Utah


    References




    External links


    USDA Plants Profile
    Species profile

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