Orontium aquaticum
{{Short description|Species of flowering plant}}
{{Speciesbox
|image = Orontium aquaticum 1 - Buffalo Botanical Gardens.jpg
|genus = Orontium
|species = aquaticum
|authority = L.
|synonyms =
- Amidena undulata Raf.
- Aronia aquatica (L.) Baill.
- Orontium angustifolium Raf.
- Orontium aquaticum f. natans Glück
- Orontium aquaticum f. terrestre Glück
- Orontium vaginatum Raf.
- Pothos ovatus Walter
|synonyms_ref = {{cite POWO |id=87585-1 |title=Orontium aquaticum L. |accessdate=18 May 2022}}
}}
Orontium aquaticum {{IPAc-en|Q|'|r|Q|n|t|i|@|m}}, sometimes called golden-club, floating arum, never-wets or tawkin,[https://www.rhs.org.uk/plants/details?plantid=1356 The Royal Horticultural Society 2017, Orontium aquaticum (Golden club )] is a species of flowering plants in the family Araceae. It is the single living species in the genus Orontium, which also contains several extinct species described from fossils.{{cite journal |last1=Bogner |first=J. |last2=Johnson |first2=K. R. |last3=Kvacek |first3=Z. |last4=Upchurch |first4=G. R. |title=New fossil leaves of Araceae from the Late Cretaceous and Paleogene of western North America |journal=Zitteliana |year=2007 |volume=A |issue=47 |pages=133–147 |issn=1612-412X|url=https://digital.library.txstate.edu/bitstream/handle/10877/2570/fulltext.pdf?sequence=1}} O. aquaticum is endemic to the eastern United States[http://efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=1&taxon_id=123218 1. Orontium aquaticum Linnaeus], Flora of North America and is found growing in ponds, streams, and shallow lakes. It prefers an acidic environment. The leaves are pointed and oval with a water repellent surface. The inflorescence is most notable for having an extremely small almost indistinguishable sheath surrounding the spadix. Very early in the flowering this green sheath withers away leaving only the spadix.
The sheath was originally classified by Adolf Engler as a spathe due it being the last foliar piece before the spadix.A. Engler, (1887). Vergleichende Untersuchungen uber die morphologischen Verhaltnisse der Araceae. II. Theil Ueber Blattstellung und Sprossverhaltnisse der Araceae, Nova Acta der Ksl. Leop.-Carol.-Deutschen Akademie der Naturforscher 39: 158-231. He also noted that species lacked a sympodial leaf. However, in a 1988 paper Thomas Ray argued that the structure was misidentified by Engler and was actually a sympodial leaf. According to Ray the spathe was missing and not the sympodial leaf. This interpretation was determined based on observations of morphological charactestics namely the appearance of a two-keeled bracteole and its positioning.T.S. Ray, (1988). Survey of Shoot Organization in the Araceae, American Journal of Botany, Vol. 75, No. 1 Despite this, the floral structure is still commonly identified in the literature as being a spathe.Z. Nie, H. Sun, H. Li, and J. Wen, (2006) Intercontinental biogeography of subfamily Orontioideae (Symplocarpus, Lysichiton, and Orontium) of Araceae in eastern Asia and North America, Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 40 (2006) 155–165L.H. Klotz, (1992). On the biology of Orontium aquaticum L. (Araceae), golden club or floating arum, Aroideana 15, 25–33.Simon J. Mayo, Josef Bogner, Peter C. Boyce: The Genera of Araceae. 1. published, Royal Botanic Gardens/ Kew Publishing, London 1997, {{ISBN|1-900347-22-9}} ([https://www.researchgate.net/publication/280387316_The_Genera_of_Araceae Full-text as PDF-file]; Continental Printing, Belgium 1997).
File:Orontium aquaticum 2 - Buffalo Botanical Gardens.jpg
File:Orontium aquaticum.jpg
References
{{Reflist}}
Bibliography
- Bown, Deni (2000). Aroids: Plants of the Arum Family [ILLUSTRATED]. Timber Press. {{ISBN|0-88192-485-7}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q2700676}}
Category:Flora of the United States
Category:Plants described in 1753
Category:Taxa named by Carl Linnaeus
{{Araceae-stub}}