Marine perennials, monoecious, completely submerged; with creeping, much-branched, compressed, orange-brown rhizomes; with several simple roots with long roothairs at nodes
Stems
, if present, floriferous, annual
Leaves
alternate, distichous, grass-like, parallel-veined, sheathing at base; sheath tubular or convolute, with a small biauriculate ligule; lamina linear, striate, apex rounded, 2-lobed or emarginate, axillary scales 4 or 2
Inflorescences
forming erect annual sympodial branches, each terminating in a 'fertile' leaf, enclosing in its sheath a unilateral spadix on which male and female flowers are arranged alternately in 2 rows, with or without marginal bract-like infolded lobes or 'retinacula' (interpreted by some botanists as a reduced perianth)
Male flower
a solitary, sessile, unilocular, dorsifixed anther; pollen filiform, with same density as seawater, captured by stigmas
Female flower
consisting of a superior, unilocular, 1-ovuled ovary terminating in a short style and 2 long stigmatic branches, protogynous (stigmas protruding from sheath during anthesis); ovule pendulous, orthotropous, bitegmic
Fruit
an indehiscent, or irregularly dehiscent nut, graniform, smooth or longitudinally striped or ribbed
Seed
: endosperm 0
x = 6 (polyploidy)
Nomenclature:
Zosteraceae
Bennett: 41 (1897) under
Naiadaceae
Phillips: 53 (1951) under
Potamogetonaceae
Obermeyer: 57 (1966)
Den Hartog: 42 (1970)
Cook: 222 (1990)
Distribution & Notes:
Global
: Genera 3, species 18, in marine and brackish water, often forming extensive beds along the coasts of the temperate seas of the northern and southern hemispheres, a few species extend into tropical waters
Southern Africa
: Genus 1, species 1
References:
BENNETT, A. 1897.
Naiadaceae
.
Flora capensis
7
COOK, C.D.K. 1990.
Aquatic plant book
. SPB Academic Publishing, The Hague
DEN HARTOG, C. 1970.
The seagrasses of the world
. North-Holland Publishing Company, Amsterdam
OBERMEYER, A.A. 1966.
Zosteraceae
.
Flora of southern Africa
1
PHILLIPS, E.P. 1951. The genera of South African flowering plants, edn 2.
Memoirs of the Botanical Survey of South Africa
No. 25
Copyright of the content hosted by this website remains with the
South African National Biodiversity Institute
(SANBI), unless stated otherwise.
Material from this site may be used in other media, provided that SANBI is acknowledged by the name
South African National Biodiversity Institute
(SANBI) or refer to the '
How to cite this resource
' paragraph on the Home page.
Liability disclaimer: Visitors use this site at their own risk and SANBI is not liable for any of the consequences resulting therefrom.
Welcome to Biodiversity Advisor 2.0!
Biodiversity Advisor, developed by the South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) and its Data Partners, is a system that will provide integrated biodiversity information to a wide range of users who will have access to geospatial data, plant and animal species distribution data, ecosystem-level data, literature, images and metadata.
The integrated information comes from our much-loved Botanical Database of Southern Africa (BODATSA) also known as Plants of Southern Africa (POSA), Zoological Database of Southern Africa (ZODATSA), Biodiversity Geographic Information System (BGIS), SANBI's institutional repository (Opus) and others.
The system is still under development, so you may find a few bugs/issues. If you do, please report it via the error reporting button available in various sections of the website or provide us with any useful feedback you may have via the ‘Give us feedback’ option available in the sidebar menu. You can create a free account for yourself by clicking on the user profile icon which will take you through to the login page. Here you can choose the ‘Create an account’ option or simply fill in your details if you have an account already. Having an account on Biodiversity Advisor will provide users with free access to biodiversity resources.
In future, Team SANBI will be able to log in using their day-to-day login details, BGIS users will be able to use their existing accounts and details, and general users will be able to log in using their LinkedIn profile, but for now you will need to create an account.