|
Juncus mertensianus
Bong. |
|
|
TAXONOMY |
|
Family: |
Juncaceae |
Genus: |
Juncus |
|
Species Synonyms: |
Juncus slwookoorum S.B. Young |
Common Names: |
slender-stemmed rush
Merten’s rush |
|
DISTRIBUTION |
|
Canada: |
Yukon Territory – British Columbia –
western Alberta – southwestern Saskatchewan |
Saskatchewan: |
southwestern Saskatchewan; Cypress Hills |
Ecoregion: |
Cypress Upland |
|
HABITAT |
|
Saskatchewan: |
wet meadows |
|
RARITY STATUS |
|
Provincial
Status According to Harms (2003): |
Threatened |
Nature Conservancy
Status: |
G5 |
Saskatchewan
Species at Risk Status: |
None |
COSEWIC Status:
|
None |
|
Juncus mertensianus
is threatened in Saskatchewan because it is rare or uncommon and is
limited to the Cypress Hills. |
|
SPECIES
DESCRIPTION |
|
Height: |
5 – 40 cm |
Roots: |
rhizomatous, sometimes very short (if plant caespitose),
not swollen, branched |
Stems: |
perennial, loosely to densely tufted, erect, terete,
smooth |
Leaves: |
basal leaves 1 – 2, cauline leaves 0 –
1, blade 0.5 – 1.5 cm long, green, flat; basal sheaths brown or purplish;
auricles 1 mm long, apex rounded to acute, membranous or scarious |
Inflorescence: |
head terminal, solitary or some with a second
and smaller pedunculate head; heads 12 – 60-flowered, spherical; primary
bract erect |
Flowers: |
bracteoles absent; tepals all about the same length,
inner may be slightly shorter than the outer, lanceolate to ovate, apex
acute dark purplish-brown to black, shiny; stamens 6, anthers much shorter
than filaments; stigmas 3 |
Fruits: |
capsules 2 – 3.5 mm long, included or slightly
exserted, obovoid, chestnut brown, valves separating at dehiscence; seeds
ellipsoid, not tailed, body yellowish-brown |
|
JUNCUS
KEY FOR SPECIES FOUND IN SASKATCHEWAN |
|
1 Inflorescence appearing lateral;
leaves all basal |
2 |
1 Inflorescence appearing terminal;
may have at least one blade-bearing leaf on lower stem or leaves all basal |
3 |
|
|
2 Bract stout, much shorter than stem;
perianth parts usually darker brown; anthers commonly much longer than their
filaments
|
J. balticus |
2 Bract slender, as long as or longer
than stem; perianth parts greenish to light brown; anthers commonly shorter
than or equal to their filaments |
J. filiformis |
|
|
3 Leaves nodulose-septate (divided
by cross-partitions), terete, or if flattened, strongly equitant |
4 |
3 Leaves not nodulose-septate, terete
or if flattened, not equitant |
12 |
|
|
4 Leaves strongly flattened and equitant |
5 |
4 Leaves terete or slightly compressed |
7 |
|
|
5 Styles surpassing petals; seeds
with a distinct tail-like appendage |
J. tracyi |
5 Styles equal to petals; seeds without
a tail |
6 |
|
|
6 Stamens 3; auricles lacking |
J. ensifolius |
6 Stamens 6; auricles present |
J. saximontanus |
|
|
7 Flowers in dense spherical heads |
8 |
7 Flowers few to many in narrower
heads |
10 |
|
|
8 Heads solitary; rhizomes densely
matted |
J. mertensianus |
8 Heads solitary; rhizomes elongate
and creeping, often bearing tubers |
9 |
|
|
9 Tepals reddish-brown, inner tepals
longer than or equal to outer tepals; leaves 1 – 2 mm thick; sheaths
with yellowish auricles |
J. nodosus var. nodosus |
9 Tepals greenish to dull brown, inner
tepals shorter than outer tepals; leaves to 5 mm thick; sheaths with hyaline
auricles |
J. torreyi |
|
|
10 Seeds about 1 mm long, with definite
white tail-like appendages |
J. brevicaudatus |
10 Seeds less than 0.5 mm long, apiculate
but without white tails |
11 |
|
|
11 Anthers shorter than or equalling
their filaments; perianth segments obtuse; capsule exceeding the perianth |
J. alpinoarticulatus ssp. nodulosus |
11 Anthers distinctly longer than
their filaments; perianth segments acute; capsule shorter than or equal
to the perianth |
J. nevadensis |
|
|
12 Each flower inserted singly on
the branches of the inflorescences and subtended by a pair of small bractlets
in addition to the bractlet at the base of the pedicel |
13 |
12 Each flower subtended only by the
single bractlet at the base of the very short pedicel |
19 |
|
|
13 Roots fibrous; dwarf species, branched
near base; annuals; leaf sheaths not auricled |
J. bufonius |
13 Rhizomes elongate or short if culms
densely tufted; plants not dwarfed or branched near the base; perennials;
leaf sheaths auricled or prolonged |
14 |
|
|
14 Leaf sheaths extending to about
halfway up the culm |
J. compressus |
14 Leaf sheaths confined to base or
only extending to about one third of the way up the stem |
15 |
|
|
15 Sepals erect, closely appressed
to the capsule |
J. vaseyi |
15 Sepals spreading to ascending,
not closely appressed to the capsule |
16 |
|
|
16 Auricles short and round; leaf
blades less than half the length of the culm |
J. dudleyi |
16 Auricles delicate and scarious;
leaf blades usually greater than half the length of the culm |
17 |
|
|
17 Capsule 3-loculed, nearly equalling
the perianth; inflorescence compact |
J. confusus |
17 Capsule 1-loculed, distinctly shorter
than the perianth; inflorescence a loose panicle |
18 |
|
|
18 Auricles prolonged into a membranous
projection 3 – 5 mm long |
J. tenuis |
18 Auricles shorter, up to 2 mm long,
submembranous |
J. interior |
|
|
19 Seeds apiculate; leaves flattened
and grass-like |
J. longistylus |
19 Seeds with distinct white tail-like
appendages; leaves terete to somewhat compressed or deeply channelled |
20 |
|
|
20 Culms arising from elongate rhizomes;
perianth and capsules dark brown to black |
J. castaneus ssp. castaneus |
20 Culms not rhizomatous, may form
tussocks; perianth and capsules pale |
21 |
|
|
21 Capsules to 9 mm long; heads 1
– 2; lower cauline leaves 1 – 3 |
J. stygius ssp. americanus |
21 Capsules to 4 mm long; heads solitary;
leaves all basal |
J. albescens |
|