Nuphar pumila subsp. sinensis


Nuphar pumila subsp. sinensis is a subspecies of Nuphar pumila native to China.

Description

Vegetative characteristics

It is a small plant with 1–3 cm wide rhizomes. The green, elliptic to ovate floating leaf is 9.3–15.5 cm long, and 6.9–12.3 cm wide. The abaxial leaf surface is glabrous to densely pubescent. The compressed petiole is 40 cm long, and 3–5 mm wide.

Generative characteristics

The 2–4.5 cm wide flower has a 3.5–5 mm wide peduncle. The 5 yellow, oblong to obovate sepals with an rounded apex are up to 2.5 cm long. The yellow, thin, spatulate to emarginate petals are 7 mm long. The stamens have 3.5–6 mm long anthers. The gynoecium consists of 8–13 carpels. The green stigmatic disk is 5–6 mm wide. The urceolate, green, 2–2.7 cm long, and 1.5–2 cm wide fruit bears brown, ovate, 3 mm long seeds.

Taxonomy

It was first published as Nuphar sinensis Hand.-Mazz. by Heinrich Raphael Eduard Handel-Mazzetti in 1926. It was included in the species Nuphar pumila DC. as Nuphar pumila subsp. sinensis Padgett published by Donald Jay Padgett in 1999 based on morphological similarities. It is placed in the section Nuphar sect. Nuphar.

Etymology

The subspecific epithet sinensis means "from China".

Ecology

Habitat

It occurs in ponds, lakes, and bogs in the warm-temperate region of southeastern China.