e-Key v3 - Najas
SANBI Flora Keys Logo
Interactive keys to the identification of seed plants of southern Africa using keys based on plant morphology.

Najadaceae - Najas L.

Description :

  • Submerged herbaceous annuals or perennials, monoecious or dioecious, in fresh or brackish water
  • Roots simple, adventitious, devoid of root caps
  • Branches upright, repeatedly forked, brittle, smooth or prickly
  • Leaves sessile, in pseudo-whorls of 3 or more, with an open, folded basal sheath and a linear, 1-veined, dentate lamina, with 2 axillary scales
  • Flowers unisexual, small, solitary or sometimes aggregated above, water-pollinated
  • Male flower a single stamen enveloped in bud by a closed spathe, with a thin inner membrane, bilobed at apex, closely adhering to the 1- or 2- or 4-thecous anther; pollen globose or ellipsoid, without exine, contents granular
  • Female flower a single ovoid carpel surrounded by a spathe, or naked; ovule solitary, basal, erect, anatropous; style filiform, with 2(3) filiform stigmatic branches
  • Fruit a small, narrowly ovoid nut; epicarp reticulated
  • Seeds : embryo straight, with a large hypocotyl and radicle; endosperm 0
  • x = 6 (7, 8, 17, 23) (high polyploidy, B-chromosomes)

Nomenclature:

  • Najas L.
    • Linnaeus: 1015 (1753)
    • Bennett: 51 (1897)
    • Obermeyer: 82 (1966)
    • Triest: 19, 28, 44, 69 (1987)

Distribution & Notes:

  • Global : Species ± 40
  • Southern Africa : Species 4, 2 widespread, in fresh or brackish water in inland or coastal lakes
    • Najas graminea Delile has been collected twice, once in Gauteng and once in Mpumalanga; it is common in the rest of Africa
    • Najas setacea Rendle has been collected in Ndumu Game Reserve, KwaZulu-Natal; this is a new record for the continent of Africa

References:

  • BENNETT, A. 1897. Naiadaceae . Flora capensis 7
  • LINNAEUS, C. 1753. Species plantarum . Laurentius Salvius, Stockholm
  • OBERMEYER, A.A. 1966. Najadaceae . Flora of southern Africa 1
  • TRIEST, L. 1987. A revision of the genus Najas L. ( Najadaceae ) in Africa and surrounding islands. Mémoires de l'Académie Royale des Sciences d'Outre-Mer , new series 21,4