Eriocaulons ...

Heiko Muth (Sumpfheini)

Aquasabi Mitarbeiter
Teammitglied
Hello Massimo,
thank You and Giovanni very much, very interesting and informative article!
So the E. "Japan Needle Leaf" has equitant leaves (similar to Acorus or Iris), that's in addition to the distichous arrangement another character occuring also in Xyris, but not in Eriocaulon:
http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx? ... _id=135197
Eriocaulaceae: leaf sheath indistinct, Xyridaceae: leaf sheath distinct:
http://www.mobot.org/mobot/research/apw ... ocaulaceae
And what's more, Cook (Aquatic Plant Book, 1996) notes "Some species such as Xyris aquatica and X. exserta are submerged".

Leaves fluctuant - ? Referring to the bending of the leaves?

I'm curious how the plant would flower!

Greetings,
Heiko
 

RareAquaticPlants

New Member
Hello Heiko,
thanks for interesting :):) Giovanni Bubici is very good tranlsator and great expert, he is a agronomist.

i don't see flower or inflorescence still, it's will be important for correct classification, i hope...

The leaves are rigid in first lenght (10cm about) and very fluctuant after: my leaves are over 50cm long!!!!
Unfortunately base rizhome parts (rizhome get from cut technique) are dead, only apical rhizome parts cutted alives.

Greetings,
Massimo Iannella
 

Heiko Muth (Sumpfheini)

Aquasabi Mitarbeiter
Teammitglied
Hello Massimo,
The leaves are rigid in first lenght (10cm about) and very fluctuant after: my leaves are over 50cm long!!!!
OK, now I understand, the leaves are flexible or flaccid. When the plant is propagated enough, one could try to cultivate a specimen emersed or in very shallow water to enhance potential flower.

Regards,
Heiko
 

Heiko Muth (Sumpfheini)

Aquasabi Mitarbeiter
Teammitglied
Hello Massimo,
leaves are flexible but very strong and fibrous, similar to Cyperaceae sp.
OK, that sounds very grass-like; in Cyperaceae the leaves are mostly tristichous, but another family that could be possible is Juncaceae, mostly with distichous leaf arrangement.
Cyperaceae sp.: Do You mean members of this family in general, or a particular aquarium plant so called in the hobby?

Btw., in the new Kasselmann book (2010) a "Cyperaceae sp." is described but not depicted, and the description may be in line with this "Eriocaulaceae sp. 'Type 2'": http://www.guitarfish.org/2007/07/11/er ... -sp-type-2
Here's a pic from a "Cyperaceae sp." looking like that: http://www.geocities.jp/tos_2344848/miz ... eae_sp.htm
 

NguyenAnders

New Member
Sumpfheini":h08h8pw3 schrieb:
Hello Massimo,
leaves are flexible but very strong and fibrous, similar to Cyperaceae sp.
OK, that sounds very grass-like; in Cyperaceae the leaves are mostly tristichous, but another family that could be possible is Juncaceae, mostly with distichous leaf arrangement.
Cyperaceae sp.: Do You mean members of this family in general, or a particular aquarium plant so called in the hobby?

Btw., in the new Kasselmann book (2010) a "Cyperaceae sp." is described but not depicted, and the description may be in line with this "Eriocaulaceae sp. 'Type 2'": http://www.guitarfish.org/2007/07/11/er ... -sp-type-2
Here's a pic from a "Cyperaceae sp." looking like that: http://www.geocities.jp/tos_2344848/miz ... eae_sp.htm


Hello Heiko,

so do you think "Eriocaulaceae type 2" is not in the Eriocaulaceae family but rather in the the Cyperaceae family? A friend of mine is trying to flower it right now. Hopefully results will come :D

It indeed does not seem like other Eriocaulaceae spp. The stem is very fibrous and hard to tear, and the roots look nothing like those of Syngonanthus, Eriocaulon, Mesanthemum, etc.

regards

---Andrew
 

Heiko Muth (Sumpfheini)

Aquasabi Mitarbeiter
Teammitglied
Hi Andrew,
so do you think "Eriocaulaceae type 2" is not in the Eriocaulaceae family but rather in the the Cyperaceae family? A friend of mine is trying to flower it right now. Hopefully results will come :D
I don't know! Here I mean "Cyperaceae sp." as trade name for a particular aquarium plant, probably the same as "Erioc. sp. Type 2", I 've got the name from Kasselmann 2010 and the Japanese website in my link above. I have had the "Erioc. sp. Type 2" only for a short time and then I gave it away (i.a. Tobi). The diversity in the families Eriocaulaceae and Cyperaceae is high, and when the friend of You will have managed to flower it, it will be a great advance for ID!
At least, because of its structure (fibrous etc.) I guess "Eriocaulaceae Type 2" is something from the order Poales within the Monocotyledoneous plants. The Poales contain quite a lot of families, i.a. Eriocaulaceae, Xyridaceae, Juncaceae, Cyperaceae, Poaceae. (The plant surely doesn't belong to Poaceae)

Regards
Heiko
 

feshfish

Member
Hallo

Hier ein Eriocaulon lividum Höhe ca 20 cm schöne hellgrüne Farbe.

Mfg Jürgen
 

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RareAquaticPlants

New Member
Wonderful plant,
i have not it, i would like :)
This species has leaves long, similar E. sp. 'Goias' but more rigid and vertical morfology.

Growing it's difficult?
 

kiko

Active Member
Hi,
das ist glaub ich eine Ericaulon sp. Goias.
Entgegen der Angaben in der Datenbank scheint die Pflanze aber eher verhältnismäßig einfach.
Sie steht da unter 0.27W/L und die Pflanze scheint damit auch keine sonderlichen Probleme zu haben. (zwischen den pics liegen ca. 3-4Wochen, man beachte das die rotundifundra die direkt dahintersteht bei dem Schwachlicht hingegen untenrum blattlos ist, die Goias scheint wenig Licht allerdings noch verhältnismäßig gut zu tolerieren)
 

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Gelöschtes Mitglied 395

Guest
Hallo,

ich habe meine unbekannte Eriocaulon (die aus Thailand) mal in ein flaches Becken gesetzt. Die Blüten habe ich dann mit einem Pinsel bestäubt. Jetzt habe ich wirklich von zwei Pflanzen ein paar winzige Samen abnehmen können. Ich habe noch ein paar Pflanzen die Blüten treiben und werde das einfach noch einmal wiederholen.

Was denkt Ihr sollte ich versuchen die Samen gleich auszusähen oder besser ersteinmal ein paar Monate warten und dann aussähen?

Ich habe irgendwo im Netz mal einen Bericht gelesen in dem Samen von Eriocaulen ausgesäht würden. Leider finde ich diesen Bericht zur Zeit nicht.

Gruß Thilo
 
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