Английская Википедия:Hydrocotyle vulgaris
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Speciesbox
Hydrocotyle vulgaris, the marsh pennywort, common pennywort, water naval, money plant, lucky plant, dollarweed or copper coin,[1] is a small creeping aquatic perennial plant native to North Africa, Europe, the Caucasus and parts of the Levant.[2]
Description
The plant has an umbrella-like leaf and lives commonly in wet places such as wetlands, marshes and swamps, sometimes even in deeper water. It grows as a perennial herbaceous plant and only reaches stature heights of 5 to 20 centimeters. With a slight smell of carrot, it is edible.Шаблон:Cn
This marsh plant forms numerous, up to 1 meter long, creeping offshoots. The serrated, rounded, shield-shaped leaves can have a diameter of up to 4 centimeters, but are often smaller. The approach of the long, hairy petioles is located in the middle of the leaf underside. The leaves are fresh green, shiny waxy and shows a clear, radially extending vein.Шаблон:Cn
The tiny, inconspicuous, hermaphrodite flowers are in low-flowered doldigenШаблон:? inflorescences or whorls, with the stems of the inflorescence about half as long as those of the leaves. The petals are greenish, white or reddish. The flowering period is from July to August. The fruits are flat, warty and winged.[3]
Cultivation
A low maintenance plant, it prefers to grow in reliably moist humus under a full sun or in part shade, indoors or outdoors, though it can tolerate full shade as well. It may also be grown as an aquatic plant in mud at the side of a pond or water garden in up to 2 inches of stagnant water. Despite its habitat in water, over-watering may still cause root rot.[4]
Population
The plant is distributed and plentiful throughout much of its range in Europe, North Africa and Western Asia. Nonetheless, it is classed as critically endangered in Croatia, vulnerable in Switzerland and near threatened in Norway. Furthermore, the plant is protected under regional legislation in France.[5]
Ecology
In Britain it is the only native Hydrocotyle, growing in wet places such as fens, swamps, bogs and marshes. For example, it is a component of purple moor grass and rush pastures – a type of Biodiversity Action Plan habitat. The flowers rarely bloom; mostly self-pollination takes place. Vegetative propagation occurs through foothills. In wild plant gardens, the marsh pennywort is used for the planting of garden ponds, and also as aquarium plant.[6]
Gallery
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UFO-shaped leaf
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Flower
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Inflorescence
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Botanical illustration by German botanist Otto Wilhelm Thomé
See also
- Umbilicus rupestris, a similar looking succulent
- Pilea peperomioides, a similar looking rosales
References
External links
- Wildflower.org.uk website giving photographic description of the plant
- ↑ Шаблон:BSBI 2007
- ↑ https://hgic.clemson.edu/factsheet/dollarweed/
- ↑ Siegmund Seybold (ed.): Schmeil-Fitschen interactive . CD-ROM version 1.1. Quelle & Meyer, Wiebelsheim 2002, Шаблон:ISBN .
- ↑ Christel Kasselmann: Aquarienpflanzen. Ulmer Verlag, Stuttgart 1995; 2., überarbeitete und erweiterte Auflage 1999, Шаблон:ISBN, S. 306.
- ↑ Ошибка цитирования Неверный тег
<ref>
; для сносокiucn status 12 November 2021
не указан текст - ↑ Manfred A. Fischer, Wolfgang Adler, Karl Oswald: Excursion flora for Austria, Liechtenstein and South Tyrol . 2nd, improved and extended edition. Upper Austria, Biology Center of the Upper Austrian Provincial Museums, Linz 2005, Шаблон:ISBN .
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- Plants described in 1753
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