triglochin การใช้
- It grows alongside other halophytes such as seaside arrowgrass ( " Triglochin maritima " ).
- ""'Triglochin maritima " "'is a species of flowering plant in the arrowgrass family Juncaginaceae.
- "Triglochin maritimum " ( Sea arrowgrass ) is similar but has the following differences : it has stolons, is stouter.
- ""'Triglochin " "'is a genus in the family Juncaginaceae described as a genus by Linnaeus in 1753.
- The swamp areas, most valuable to the waterfowl, have characteristic vegetation of Carex ( sedges ), Triglochin palustris ( marsh arrowgrass ), Batrachium, and Utricularia ( bladderwort ).
- ""'Triglochin striata " "'is a plant native to temperate and subtropic Australia with specimens recorded from Perth in Western Australia through to Mackay in North Queensland.
- North America has four accepted species, two of which can also be found in Europe : " Triglochin palustris " ( marsh arrowgrass ) and " Triglochin maritima " ( sea arrowgrass ).
- North America has four accepted species, two of which can also be found in Europe : " Triglochin palustris " ( marsh arrowgrass ) and " Triglochin maritima " ( sea arrowgrass ).
- The grassland vegetation usually has a fairly small number of species, but those present are often scarce elsewhere, such as sea arrowgrass ( " Triglochin maritimum " ), divided sedge ( " Carex divisa " ) and strawberry clover " Trifolium fragiferum ".
- Fauna found in and around the Broad includes the white water-lily " Nymphaea alba ", common reed " Phragmites australis " and the rarer tussock-sedge " Carex appropinquata " as well as species such as marsh arrowgrass " Triglochin palustris " and southern marsh-orchid " Dactylorhiza praetermissa ".
- The bog mat supports a plant community that is considered diverse and unusual, with several rare species present, including : bog arrow-grass ( " Triglochin maritima " ), dragon's mouth orchid ( " Arethusa bulbosa " ), livid sedge ( " Carex livida " ), small-headed bog sedge ( " Carex tenuiflora " ), as well as one of only a few known populations of bog rush ( " Juncus stygius " ) in the State of Wisconsin.