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Peltandra virginica

Peltandra virginica is a plant of the arum family known as green arrow arum[3] and tuckahoe.[4] It is widely distributed in wetlands in the eastern United States, as well as in Quebec, Ontario, and Cuba.[2][5][6] It is common in central Florida including the Everglades[7] and along the Gulf Coast.[8] Its rhizomes are tolerant to low oxygen levels found in wetland soils.[9] It can be found elsewhere in North America as an introduced species and often an invasive plant.[citation needed]

Peltandra virginica
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Alismatales
Family: Araceae
Genus: Peltandra
Species:
P. virginica
Binomial name
Peltandra virginica
Distribution of Peltandra virginica
Synonyms[2]
  • Arum virginicum L.
  • Calla virginica (L.) Michx.
  • Caladium virginicum (L.) Hook.
  • Lecontia virginica (L.) Torr.
  • Rensselaeria virginica (L.) L.C.Beck
  • Alocasia virginica (L.) Raf.
  • Peltandra undulata Raf.
  • Arum walteri Elliott
  • Peltandra undulata Schott
  • Peltandra angustifolia Raf.
  • Peltandra canadensis Raf.
  • Peltandra hastata Raf.
  • Peltandra walteri (Elliott) Raf.
  • Caladium undulatum Steud.
  • Peltandra tharpii F.A.Barkley
  • Peltandra luteospadix Fernald

P. virginica is a hydrophytic marshland aquatic plant pollinated by a chloropid fly through providing a brood site and releasing the pollen onto them. The primary dispersal mechanisms are via water and animals.[4][10]

Description edit

This is an emergent perennial herb growing from a large rhizome and producing many large leaves. An individual leaf may have a petiole nearly a meter long and a blade half a meter in length. The leaves are quite variable in shape and size, but they are often generally arrowhead-shaped.

The inflorescence bears male and female flowers, as well as sterile flowers. The flower varies from whitish to greenish to yellow. The fruit is a brown berry containing a few seeds within a clear gelatinous pulp. Large number of seeds can accumulate in the soil of wetlands.[5][11]

Peltandra virginica is a marshland aquatic plant, growing in North America bogs, ponds, and marshes. The roots and base grow into the submerged substrate, and the leaves and inflorescences project up and out of the water. The roots form a perennial rhizome. Various forms of leaf blades have been observed, both in larger ranges and smaller individual populations. Petioles range from green to green-purple to purple with a medium green blade petiole lengths between 38 and 98 centimeters and blade length being between 9 and 57 centimeters. Lateral veins also have variable thicknesses. Inflorescences are generally pale green to white, being lighter within the spathe. Lengths for the inflorescence range between 7 and 25 centimeters with the spadix being about half the size to the full length of the spathe with greenish to white flowers, producing fruits that rot within the closed spathe. Fruits are pea green to mottled green and purple and range from 6 to 16 millimeters. In most of its range, it blooms from spring to late summer and fall and in warmer regions, it will bloom into the winter. It generally thrives in low salinity environments.[12][4]

Taxonomy edit

Arrow arum, Peltandra virginica, is a member of the arum family, Araceae, and is known by the names tuckahoe, green arrow arum, and peltandre.[4][13] It was first identified as "tockowhough" by William Strachey, Secretary of the Colony of Virginia in 1611, in his book The Historie of Travaile Into Virginia Britannia.[14] He describes its starchy root as a primary food source of the Powhatan Indians which they gathered from the marshes of Virginia. It was originally described as Arum virginicum by Carl Linnaeus in 1753 and has also been placed in the genera Alocasia, Caladium, Calla, Lecontia, and Rensselaeria.[13] Other synonyms include Peltandra luteospadix and P. tharpii.[13]

In the eastern United States and Canada where Peltandra virginica resides, one other Peltandra species exists, P. sagittifolia.[15] P. virginica can be distinguished from the other extant taxon of Peltandra by the variation in leaf form, average greater size in non-reproductive structures, and the difference in color of the fruit. The fruit of P. sagittifolia is red with a white spathe, and the fruit of P. virginica are green to purple with a green to yellow green spathe.[4]

Distribution and habitat edit

Peltandra virginica is a native to North America; its range spans the entire eastern coast of the United States and goes as far west as Texas. It is also naturalized in areas of California up to Oregon and is present in eastern regions of Canada.[16][3] It mostly inhabits the wetlands and swamps, including marshes and bogs.[16][3]

Conservation edit

Based on the Red List of Threatened Species 2016, P. virginica is a taxon of Least Concern, this is because of its broad range in eastern and central North America.[10] In some areas within the range of P. virginica the populations are diminishing.[10] It has also been found in California.[13] While common in most of its range, P. virginica is listed as Endangered in Iowa.[3]

Pollination biology edit

In the pistillate stage the spadix of P. virginica is entirely covered by the spathe, not allowing insects to pollinate female flowers.[12] Pollination is achieved by the plant's utilizing brood-site-based pollination. The chloropid fly Elachiptera formosa forms a symbiotic relationship with the inflorescence.[12][4] The flies are attracted to the odor of the male flowers in an inflorescence's staminate stage where they feed on pollen and mate then find oviposition sites, followed by the development of the larvae and maturity of the flies.[12]

Ethnobotany edit

The plant contains calcium oxalate crystals, making it unpalatable. Indigenous peoples of the Americas used most parts of the plant for food, however, cooking it for hours first to make it safe to eat.[4][17]

Historical accounts suggest that Native Americans may have used Peltandra virginica as a food source. They may have eaten the seeds and fruits as well as the leaves and roots. The section of P. virginica's range where its populations are highest, from Pennsylvania to coastal Virginia, are where it was most likely used for food.[4] In other times and places, it has been used as an ornamental plant and to stabilize sediments in small bodies of water.[18]

Wildlife edit

Peltandra virginica is considered a low percentage of various animals' food sources. Peltandra virginica makes up 5–10% of the diet of small mammals that reside within its range and 10–25% of the diet of water birds that share its range.[3]

Toxicity edit

The non-reproductive structures of Peltandra virginica are known to contain calcium oxalate crystals, that can irritate the gastrointestinal system of animals and people and has been linked to the development of kidney stones.[18][19]

References edit

  1. ^ Smith, K. (2016). "Peltandra virginica". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T64319363A67730317. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-1.RLTS.T64319363A67730317.en. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families
  3. ^ a b c d e "Plants Profile for Peltandra virginica (green arrow arum)". plants.usda.gov. Retrieved 2018-10-30.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h "Peltandra virginica in Flora of North America @ efloras.org". www.efloras.org. Retrieved 2018-11-28.
  5. ^ a b Whigham, Dennis F., Robert L. Simpson and Mary A. Leck. 1979. The Distribution of Seeds, Seedlings, and Established Plants of Arrow Arum (Peltandra virginica (L.) Kunth) in a Freshwater Tidal Wetland Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 106: 193-199
  6. ^ Acevedo-Rodríguez, P. & Strong, M.T. (2012). Catalogue of seed plants of the West Indies. Smithsonian Contributions to Botany 98: 1-1192.
  7. ^ Loveless, C. M. 1959. A study of the vegetation in the Florida everglades. Ecology 40: 1–9.
  8. ^ Keddy, P. A., Campbell, D., McFalls T., Shaffer, G., Moreau, R., Dranguet, C., and Heleniak, R. (2007). The wetlands of lakes Pontchartrain and Maurepas: past, present and future. Environmental Reviews 15: 1–35.
  9. ^ Laing, H. E. (1940). Respiration of the rhizomes of Nuphar advenum and other water plants. American Journal of Botany 27: 574–81.
  10. ^ a b c "The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Retrieved 2018-11-28.
  11. ^ Leck, M. A. and Graveline, K. J. (1979). The seed bank of a freshwater tidal marsh. American Journal of Botany 66: 1006–15.
  12. ^ a b c d Patt, Joseph M.; French, James C.; Schal, Coby; Lech, Joseph; Hartman, Thomas G. (October 1995). "The pollination biology of tuckahoe, Peltandra virginica (Araceae)". American Journal of Botany. 82 (10): 1230–1240. doi:10.1002/j.1537-2197.1995.tb12656.x. ISSN 0002-9122.
  13. ^ a b c d "!Peltandra virginica (L.) Raf. ex Schott & Endl". www.tropicos.org. Retrieved 2018-11-28.
  14. ^ The Historie of Travaile Into Virginia Britannia, W. Strachey,https://archive.org/details/historietravail00majogoog/page/n187/mode/1up?q=tockowhough&view=theater
  15. ^ "Search results — The Plant List". theplantlist.org. Retrieved 2018-11-28.
  16. ^ a b "Peltandra virginica - Plant Finder". www.missouribotanicalgarden.org. Retrieved 2018-10-30.
  17. ^ Plant of the Week
  18. ^ a b Moore, Kimberly. "Native Aquatic and Wetland Plants: Arrow Arum, Peltandra virginica" (PDF). University of Florida: IFAS Extension.
  19. ^ "Calcium Oxalate Stones". National Kidney Foundation. 2016-05-16. Retrieved 2018-11-28.

External links edit

  • Jepson Manual Treatment
  • Information from the Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants of the University of Florida.

peltandra, virginica, plant, arum, family, known, green, arrow, arum, tuckahoe, widely, distributed, wetlands, eastern, united, states, well, quebec, ontario, cuba, common, central, florida, including, everglades, along, gulf, coast, rhizomes, tolerant, oxygen. Peltandra virginica is a plant of the arum family known as green arrow arum 3 and tuckahoe 4 It is widely distributed in wetlands in the eastern United States as well as in Quebec Ontario and Cuba 2 5 6 It is common in central Florida including the Everglades 7 and along the Gulf Coast 8 Its rhizomes are tolerant to low oxygen levels found in wetland soils 9 It can be found elsewhere in North America as an introduced species and often an invasive plant citation needed Peltandra virginica Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Monocots Order Alismatales Family Araceae Genus Peltandra Species P virginica Binomial name Peltandra virginica L Schott Distribution of Peltandra virginica Synonyms 2 Arum virginicum L Calla virginica L Michx Caladium virginicum L Hook Lecontia virginica L Torr Rensselaeria virginica L L C Beck Alocasia virginica L Raf Peltandra undulata Raf Arum walteri Elliott Peltandra undulata Schott Peltandra angustifolia Raf Peltandra canadensis Raf Peltandra hastata Raf Peltandra walteri Elliott Raf Caladium undulatum Steud Peltandra tharpii F A Barkley Peltandra luteospadix Fernald P virginica is a hydrophytic marshland aquatic plant pollinated by a chloropid fly through providing a brood site and releasing the pollen onto them The primary dispersal mechanisms are via water and animals 4 10 Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Conservation 5 Pollination biology 6 Ethnobotany 7 Wildlife 8 Toxicity 9 References 10 External linksDescription editThis is an emergent perennial herb growing from a large rhizome and producing many large leaves An individual leaf may have a petiole nearly a meter long and a blade half a meter in length The leaves are quite variable in shape and size but they are often generally arrowhead shaped The inflorescence bears male and female flowers as well as sterile flowers The flower varies from whitish to greenish to yellow The fruit is a brown berry containing a few seeds within a clear gelatinous pulp Large number of seeds can accumulate in the soil of wetlands 5 11 Peltandra virginica is a marshland aquatic plant growing in North America bogs ponds and marshes The roots and base grow into the submerged substrate and the leaves and inflorescences project up and out of the water The roots form a perennial rhizome Various forms of leaf blades have been observed both in larger ranges and smaller individual populations Petioles range from green to green purple to purple with a medium green blade petiole lengths between 38 and 98 centimeters and blade length being between 9 and 57 centimeters Lateral veins also have variable thicknesses Inflorescences are generally pale green to white being lighter within the spathe Lengths for the inflorescence range between 7 and 25 centimeters with the spadix being about half the size to the full length of the spathe with greenish to white flowers producing fruits that rot within the closed spathe Fruits are pea green to mottled green and purple and range from 6 to 16 millimeters In most of its range it blooms from spring to late summer and fall and in warmer regions it will bloom into the winter It generally thrives in low salinity environments 12 4 Taxonomy editArrow arum Peltandra virginica is a member of the arum family Araceae and is known by the names tuckahoe green arrow arum and peltandre 4 13 It was first identified as tockowhough by William Strachey Secretary of the Colony of Virginia in 1611 in his book The Historie of Travaile Into Virginia Britannia 14 He describes its starchy root as a primary food source of the Powhatan Indians which they gathered from the marshes of Virginia It was originally described as Arum virginicum by Carl Linnaeus in 1753 and has also been placed in the genera Alocasia Caladium Calla Lecontia and Rensselaeria 13 Other synonyms include Peltandra luteospadix and P tharpii 13 In the eastern United States and Canada where Peltandra virginica resides one other Peltandra species exists P sagittifolia 15 P virginica can be distinguished from the other extant taxon of Peltandra by the variation in leaf form average greater size in non reproductive structures and the difference in color of the fruit The fruit of P sagittifolia is red with a white spathe and the fruit of P virginica are green to purple with a green to yellow green spathe 4 Distribution and habitat editPeltandra virginica is a native to North America its range spans the entire eastern coast of the United States and goes as far west as Texas It is also naturalized in areas of California up to Oregon and is present in eastern regions of Canada 16 3 It mostly inhabits the wetlands and swamps including marshes and bogs 16 3 Conservation editBased on the Red List of Threatened Species 2016 P virginica is a taxon of Least Concern this is because of its broad range in eastern and central North America 10 In some areas within the range of P virginica the populations are diminishing 10 It has also been found in California 13 While common in most of its range P virginica is listed as Endangered in Iowa 3 Pollination biology editIn the pistillate stage the spadix of P virginica is entirely covered by the spathe not allowing insects to pollinate female flowers 12 Pollination is achieved by the plant s utilizing brood site based pollination The chloropid fly Elachiptera formosa forms a symbiotic relationship with the inflorescence 12 4 The flies are attracted to the odor of the male flowers in an inflorescence s staminate stage where they feed on pollen and mate then find oviposition sites followed by the development of the larvae and maturity of the flies 12 Ethnobotany editThe plant contains calcium oxalate crystals making it unpalatable Indigenous peoples of the Americas used most parts of the plant for food however cooking it for hours first to make it safe to eat 4 17 Historical accounts suggest that Native Americans may have used Peltandra virginica as a food source They may have eaten the seeds and fruits as well as the leaves and roots The section of P virginica s range where its populations are highest from Pennsylvania to coastal Virginia are where it was most likely used for food 4 In other times and places it has been used as an ornamental plant and to stabilize sediments in small bodies of water 18 Wildlife editPeltandra virginica is considered a low percentage of various animals food sources Peltandra virginica makes up 5 10 of the diet of small mammals that reside within its range and 10 25 of the diet of water birds that share its range 3 Toxicity editThe non reproductive structures of Peltandra virginica are known to contain calcium oxalate crystals that can irritate the gastrointestinal system of animals and people and has been linked to the development of kidney stones 18 19 References edit Smith K 2016 Peltandra virginica IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T64319363A67730317 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 1 RLTS T64319363A67730317 en Retrieved 20 November 2021 a b Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families a b c d e Plants Profile for Peltandra virginica green arrow arum plants usda gov Retrieved 2018 10 30 a b c d e f g h Peltandra virginica in Flora of North America efloras org www efloras org Retrieved 2018 11 28 a b Whigham Dennis F Robert L Simpson and Mary A Leck 1979 The Distribution of Seeds Seedlings and Established Plants of Arrow Arum Peltandra virginica L Kunth in a Freshwater Tidal Wetland Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 106 193 199 Acevedo Rodriguez P amp Strong M T 2012 Catalogue of seed plants of the West Indies Smithsonian Contributions to Botany 98 1 1192 Loveless C M 1959 A study of the vegetation in the Florida everglades Ecology 40 1 9 Keddy P A Campbell D McFalls T Shaffer G Moreau R Dranguet C and Heleniak R 2007 The wetlands of lakes Pontchartrain and Maurepas past present and future Environmental Reviews 15 1 35 Laing H E 1940 Respiration of the rhizomes of Nuphar advenum and other water plants American Journal of Botany 27 574 81 a b c The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species IUCN Red List of Threatened Species Retrieved 2018 11 28 Leck M A and Graveline K J 1979 The seed bank of a freshwater tidal marsh American Journal of Botany 66 1006 15 a b c d Patt Joseph M French James C Schal Coby Lech Joseph Hartman Thomas G October 1995 The pollination biology of tuckahoe Peltandra virginica Araceae American Journal of Botany 82 10 1230 1240 doi 10 1002 j 1537 2197 1995 tb12656 x ISSN 0002 9122 a b c d Peltandra virginica L Raf ex Schott amp Endl www tropicos org Retrieved 2018 11 28 The Historie of Travaile Into Virginia Britannia W Strachey https archive org details historietravail00majogoog page n187 mode 1up q tockowhough amp view theater Search results The Plant List theplantlist org Retrieved 2018 11 28 a b Peltandra virginica Plant Finder www missouribotanicalgarden org Retrieved 2018 10 30 Plant of the Week a b Moore Kimberly Native Aquatic and Wetland Plants Arrow Arum Peltandra virginica PDF University of Florida IFAS Extension Calcium Oxalate Stones National Kidney Foundation 2016 05 16 Retrieved 2018 11 28 External links editJepson Manual Treatment Information from the Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants of the University of Florida Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peltandra virginica amp oldid 1192582180, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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