Marsilea aegyptiaca Willd.
Synonyms |
|
---|---|
Common name |
|
Description |
Floating form: stipe up to 30 cm long. Leaflets up to 25 × 17 mm, broadly obovate to broadly obdeltate, outer margin rounded, entire to shallowly sinuate, hairless, with brown interstitial streks below. Dry land form: stipe up to 4.5 cm long. Leaflets up to 10 × 7 mm, narrowly cuneate to broadly obdeltate, outer margins rounded to truncate, finaly set with long hairs. Sporocarps: usually in clusters of 2 or more, roughly square in lateral view, upper side straight, under side rounded, outer side rounded, lateral surfaces with a broad, somewhat curved, vertical furrow, oblong and grooved from the front; densely hairy when young becoming subglabrous with age; inferior tooth absent, superior tooth prominent, acute; pedicels up to 8 mm long, long, erect, twisted or straight, free, 2 or more arising from the axil of the stipe. |
Notes | The sporocarps of M. aegyptiaca have a backward-facing lateral groove, this is not found in other Marsilea species from southern Africa. |
Derivation | aegyptiaca: from Egypt, the species was first collected in Egypt. |
Habitat | Arid semi-desert, growing along the margins of seasonal pans, pools and briefly flowing rivers. |
Distribution worldwide | Africa, Madagascar and probably India. |
Distribution in Africa |
Algeria, Botswana, Egypt, Ethiopia, Libya, Mali, Morocco and Western Sahara, Namibia, Sudan and South Sudan, Tunesia. |
Growth form |
Aquatic, terrestrial. |
Literature |
|