Species

Sagittaria platyphylla

Common Name(s)

arrowhead

Authority

Sagittaria platyphylla (Engelmann) Smith

Family

Alismataceae

Brief Description

A marginal aquatic plant, with lance-shaped leaves, white flowers and submerged strap like leaves.

Flora Category

Vascular - Exotic

Structural Class

Monocotyledonous Herbs

Distribution

Locally naturalised, mostly Auckland and Waikato Regions.

Habitat

Still and slow flowing water bodies and wetlands.

Features

Emergent rhizomatous perennial herb up to c. 1 m tall. Submerged leaves are strap-shaped, 10-50 cm long and 3 cm wide with clearly visible longitudinal veins. Leaves above the water have a long petiole (c. 40 cm) which is triangular in cross section and a lance-shaped leaf blade 10-25 cm x 2-8 cm. Flowers are 3-petalled, white with 3 petals and about 6 cm across. Tubers form on rhizomes. Flowers bend downwards when fertilised (a characteristic of this species) and fruiting heads globose, 0.5-1.5 cm across, each with many seeds. Seeds are brown, wedge shaped, 2-3 mm long, 1.3 mm wide, winged with a characteristic oblique beak.

Similar Taxa

Alisma spp. Alisma species have lanceolate leaves but D-shaped rather than triangular petioles and much larger inflorescenses with smaller flowers.

Flowering

November - March

Flower Colours

White

Fruiting

Autumn

Year Naturalised

1998

Origin

Native to North America. First recorded at a field site in New Zealand on Auckland's North Shore in 1988.

Reason for Introduction

Ornamental pond plant

Control Techniques

Notify regional council if found

Life Cycle and Dispersal

The plant increases density and spreads locally by its creeping root system. It spreads to other areas through seed carried by water, machinery, wildlife and humans, as well as rhizome fragments being transported by ditch cleaning machinery and spoil. Spreads by water dispersed seed, rhizomes, and tubers. Also deliberate planting. Sagittaria forms extensive infestations in shallow waterways, seriously restricting water flow and increasing sedimentation, thus aggravating flooding.

Attribution

Factsheet prepared by Paul Champion and Deborah Hofstra (NIWA). Life cycle and dispersal information from (DoC,1998).

References and further reading

Champion et al (2012). Freshwater Pests of New Zealand.  NIWA publication. http://www.niwa.co.nz/freshwater-and-estuaries/management-tools/identification-guides-and-fact-sheets/freshwater-pest-species.

Kasselmann C (2003).  Aquarium plants. Krieger Publishing company, Florida, 518pp.

This page last updated on 21 Aug 2013