Azolla filiculoides Lam.
Synonyms |
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Common name |
Red water fern Water fern |
Description |
Rhizomes horizontal, branched, up to 25-35 mm long, bearing roots singly or in clusters of 2-3. Leaves closely overlapping, 2-lobed, each lobe 0.5-1.5 mm long, silvery-green, turning red in winter; dorsal lobe broadly ovate to almost circular, apex rounded, margin translucent, thickly papillate; ventral lobe like dorsal lobe but completely translucent. Plant heterosporous. |
Notes | A fairly frequent well-naturalised species. It differs from A. nilotica in having 1-3 roots per node whereas A. nilotica has numerous (5 or more) roots per node. The other native Azolla, A. pinnata, has 2-3 roots per node, but the plant is more noticeably pinnate, the leaves are smaller and more acute at the apex and the plant is never reddish.
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Derivation | filiculoides: resembling a fern (from the Latin, filicum for a fern); unclear reference since Azolla does not coincide with the image that one has of a fern. |
Habitat | In slow-moving water, such as in dams and ditches and slower-flowing parts of streams and rivers. |
Distribution worldwide | Africa; native to tropical S America (Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Peru), but now widespread as a weed in Europe, N America, Australia and New Zealand. |
Distribution in Africa |
Egypt, Lesotho, Morocco and Western Sahara, South Africa, Zimbabwe. |
Growth form |
Aquatic. |
Literature |
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