Species of grass
Juncus marginatus
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Scientific classification
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Kingdom:
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Plantae
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Clade:
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Tracheophytes
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Clade:
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Angiosperms
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Clade:
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Monocots
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Clade:
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Commelinids
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Order:
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Poales
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Family:
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Juncaceae
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Genus:
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Juncus
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Species:
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J. marginatus
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Binomial name
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Juncus marginatus
Rostk.
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Synonyms[1]
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- Juncus aristulatus Michx.
- Juncus aristulatus var. pinetorum Coville
- Juncus buchenaui Sved.
- Juncus canaliculatus Liebm.
- Juncus cylindricus M.A.Curtis
- Juncus heteranthos Nutt.
- Juncus marginatus var. aristulatus (Michx.) Coville
- Juncus marginatus var. biflorus (Elliott) Engelm.
- Juncus marginatus var. marginatus
- Juncus marginatus var. odoratus Torr.
- Juncus marginatus var. paucicapitatus Engelm.
- Juncus marginatus var. setosus Coville
- Juncus odoratus (Torr.) Steud.
- Juncus setosus (Coville) Small
- Luzula angustifolia Poir.
- Luzula juncoides Poir.
- Tristemon laxum Raf.
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Juncus marginatus is a species of flowering plant, it is a type of rush with the common names of margined rush and grass-leaf rush.[2]
Description
Juncus marginatus is a grass-like, herbaceous, short-lived perennial growing from short rhizomes.[3] Plants produce dense tufts or clumps growing 30-130 cm tall.[4] The plants are sometimes rhizomatous. The leaf blades are flat. The flowers are grouped together into a terminal inflorescence called a glomerulus.[5] Each flower has three stamens and three sharply acute sepals that are reddish-brown in color. The plump and ribbed seeds are produced in a rounded and beakless capsule. The small yellow to light brown seeds are spindle-shaped, and around 0.5mm in length and lack a tail but have sharp points on either end (apiculate).[3][4] The diploid chromosome count is 38.[4]
Distribution and habitat
Juncus marginatus grows in North America in the Eastern and Southeastern US, ranging to Texas and South Dakota.[5] It is also found Ontario Canada, California, Colorado, New Mexico, Oregon, New Mexico, the West Indies (Cuba), and Central America; where is found growing in moist to wet bogs, on shorelines, in marshes and ditches - with sandy, peaty, or clayey soils.[4] One historic population existed in Minnesota until 1999 when other small populations were found in Anoka County; because of its rarity it was listed as an endangered specie in the state.[3] In Minnesota the species is found growing in shallow wetlands/prairies of the Anoka Sand Plain where the normally dry sandy ground dips below the water table.[3]
References