Juncus heldreichianus

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Juncus heldreichianus
Juncus heldreichianus subsp. heldreichianus from Antalya showing size, solitary form and arching lower parts
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Clade: Commelinids
Order: Poales
Family: Juncaceae
Genus: Juncus
Species:
J. heldreichianus
Binomial name
Juncus heldreichianus
T.Marsson ex Parl.[1]
Elongated inflorescence of subsp. heldreichianus
Pale-winged inner 3 tepals (subsp. heldreichianus)
Blunt-edged/tipped fruit (subsp. heldreichianus)
Small seeds (subsp. heldreichianus)
Large terminal bracts (subsp. heldreichianus)
Pointed tips (subsp. heldreichianus)
Unbroken pith (subsp. heldreichianus)

Juncus heldreichianus is a large tufted species of rush in the family Juncaceae, formed of two subspecies.

A large, densely-stemmed rush, forming individualised (poorly-creeping) plants; subsp. heldreichianus attains 100–150 cm with rather arching stems, subsp. orientalis reaches 70 cm.

Inflorescences for subsp. heldreichianus are usually long and narrow, appearing stretched-out, with well-spaced lax floral heads (therefore resembling J. maritimus, which however usually forms creeping patches), whilst for subsp. orientalis the inflorescence is composed of a closer spray of well-separated heads of flowers.

The individual flowers have 6 tepals typical of the genus Juncus, but with the inner 3 with broad pale margins, notched at the top, the flowers having an over all light brown colour (J. littoralis being dark brown).

The mature fruit capsules are up to 4 mm (J. acutus 4–6 mm) with blunt seams converging as a blunt tip (J. littoralis having sharp seams converging to a sharp pyramidal tip).

Seeds are small (0.8-0.9 mm long, 1.0-1.5 mm with appendages) compared to J. littoralis (0.8-1.1 mm long, 1.5-2.0 with appendages).[2][3]

Range

Habitat

References

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