Potamogeton nodosus (Long-leaved Pondweed)

Plant Info
Also known as: American Pondweed, Knotty Pondweed
Genus:Potamogeton
Family:Potamogetonaceae (Pondweed)
Life cycle:perennial
Origin:native
Habitat:part shade, sun; shallow to 6 feet deep water; moderate to hard water lakes, ponds, streams, rivers
Bloom season:June - September
Plant height:to 6 feet
Wetland Indicator Status:GP: OBL MW: OBL NCNE: OBL
MN county distribution (click map to enlarge):Minnesota county distribution map
National distribution (click map to enlarge):National distribution map

Pick an image for a larger view. See the glossary for icon descriptions.

Detailed Information

Flower: Flower shape: 4-petals Flower shape: indistinct Cluster type: spike

[photo of flower cluster] Dense cylindrical spike held above the surface of the water, 1 to 2¾ inches (to 7 cm) long at the tip of the stem and arising from the axils of floating leaves. Spikes have 10 to 16 whorls of flowers, each flower with a 4-parted style surrounded by 4 stamens, each stamen with a reddish to orange-brown, ladle-shaped, sepal-like appendage.

Leaves and stems: Leaf attachment: alternate Leaf type: simple

[photo of floating leaves] Both submersed and floating leaves are produced, more or less spirally arranged. Floating leaves are firm, green, elliptic, 1 to 5+ inches long, ½ to 1¾ inches wide, toothless, pointed at the tip, usually tapering at the base or somehat rounded, with 9 to 21 veins flanking the midrib. The leaf stalk is usually much longer than the blade.

[photo of submersed leaves] Submersed leaves are thin, bright green to reddish, narrowly lance-elliptic, 3½ to 8 inches long, 3/8 to 1 3/8 inches (10 to 35 mm) wide, pointed at the tip, tapering at the base, often wavy along the edges, on a stalk more than ¾ inch and commonly 2 to 4+ inches long. The midvein is prominent with 2 to 5 narrow rows of large, empty cells (known as the lacunar band) along each side and flanked by 7 to 15 lateral veins.

[photo of stipules] At the base of the leaf stalk is a pale, membranous appendage (stipule), not connected to the leaf blade, 1 to 3½ inches long, the tip pointed to rounded and not shredding, and may disintegrate by mid-summer. Stems are round, unbranched or few-branched. Large colonies are often formed from spreading rhizomes. Vegetative buds (turions) are not produced. Glands at the leaf nodes are absent.

Fruit: Fruit type: seed_without_plume

[photo of developing fruit] Fruit is a dry seed (achene), the flowering spikes forming densely packed seed heads, red to reddish-brown when mature.

[photo of maturing achenes] Achenes are irregularly oval, 2.7 to 4.3 mm long, with a narrow, slightly bumpy keel along the back edge sometimes flanked by a pair of less prominent lateral keels. The short, abrupt beak is erect.

Notes:

Large-leaved Pondweed, known as Potamogeton americanus in older references, is fairly common in Minnesota, often forming large colonies, and has a world-wide distribution. It may be found in the quiet waters of lakes and ponds or more often in slow to moderately fast moving rivers and streams, in as little as a few inches of water to 6+ feet deep. It is fairly easily distinguished by elliptic floating leaves, tapering at both ends or only slightly rounded at the base, on stalks usually longer than the blades, and the larger submersed leaves narrowly lance-elliptic, to 8 inches long and about 1 inch wide, tapering at both ends, on stalks more than ¾ inch (2 cm) long, commonly 2 to 4 inches long.

Floating leaves resemble those of some other Pondweeds, but their blades may be heart-shaped or more consistently rounded at the base and/or tip, leaf stalks may be shorter than the blade, submersed leaves may be broader and/or stalkless or shorter-stalked, not more than 2 cm long. While the majority of references state the achenes of P. nodosus have 3 strongly developed, sharp keels, more than one noted the lateral keels are not always present or not always so sharp, and the latter is what we found on achenes that were not quite fully mature as in our photo; that may change as achenes dry down and we'll investigate that further. In any case, the achenes should not be necessary for a positive ID of this species.

Native Plant Nurseries, Restoration and Landscaping Services ↓

Map of native plant resources in the upper midwest

  • Shooting Star Native Seeds - Native Prairie Grass and Wildflower Seeds
  • Morning Sky Greenery - Native Prairie Plants
  • Natural Shore Technologies - Using science to improve land and water
  • Minnesota Native Landscapes - Your Ecological Problem Solvers
  • Spangle Creek Labs - Native orchids, lab propagated

More photos

Photos by K. Chayka taken in Lake County. Photos by Peter M. Dziuk taken in Crow Wing, Itasca and Lake counties, and in Wisconsin.

Comments

Have you seen this plant in Minnesota, or have any other comments about it?

Post a comment

Note: All comments are moderated before posting to keep the riff-raff out. An email address is required, but will not be posted—it will only be used for information exchange between the 2 of us (if needed) and will never be given to a 3rd party without your express permission.

For info on subjects other than plant identification (gardening, invasive species control, edible plants, etc.), please check the links and invasive species pages for additional resources.



(required)




Note: Comments or information about plants outside of Minnesota and neighboring states may not be posted because I’d like to keep the focus of this web site centered on Minnesota. Thanks for your understanding.