Eicchornia crassipes


Eicchornia crassipes
(Eceng gondok)

Gambar 1. Eicchornia crassipes

Klasifikasi Ilmiah
Kingdom
Plantae
Division
Magnoliophyta
Class
Liliopsida
Order
Liliales
Family
Ponteridiaceae
Genus
Eicchornia
Species
Eicchornia crassipes

DESCRIPTION
The initial leaves of seedling E. crassipes are elongated and strap-like, but soon develop the familiar spathulate form and, under suitable unshaded conditions, swollen petioles which ensure that, once dislodged, the seedlings will float from the mud into open water. The plant is very variable in size, seedlings having leaves that are only a few centimetres across or high, whereas mature plants with good nutrient supply may reach 1 m in height. Plants in an uncrowded situation tend to have short, spreading petioles with pronounced swelling, while in a dense stand they are taller, more erect and with little or no swelling of the petioles.

The plant system consists of individual shoots/crowns each with up to ten expanded leaves arranged spirally (3/8 phyllotaxy) and separated by very short internodes. As individual shoots develop, the older leaves die off leaving a stub of leafless dead shoot projecting downwards. This may eventually cause the whole shoot to sink and die.

Leaves consist of petiole (often swollen, 2-5 cm thick) and blade (roughly round, ovoid or kidney-shaped, up to 15 cm across). The base of the petiole and any subsequent leaf is enclosed in a stipule up to 6 cm long.

Roots develop at the base of each leaf and form a dense mass: usually 20-60 cm long, though they can extend to 300 cm. The ratio of root to shoot depends on the nutrient conditions, and in low nutrient conditions they may account for over 60% of the total plant weight. They are white when formed in total darkness but often purplish under field conditions, especially in conditions of low nutrients.

Periodically, axillary buds develop as stolons, growing horizontally for 10-50 cm before establishing daughter plants. Extremely large populations of inter-connected shoots can develop very rapidly, though the connecting stolons eventually die.

The inflorescence is a spike which develops from the apical meristem, but tends to appear lateral owing to the immediate development of an axillary bud as a 'renewal' or 'continuation' shoot. Each spike, up to 50 cm high, is subtended at the base by two bracts and has 8-15 sessile flowers (rarely 4-35). Each flower has a perianth tube 1.5 cm long, expanding into six mauve or purple lobes up to 4 cm long. The main lobe has a bright-yellow, diamond-shaped patch surrounded by deeper purple. Once the inflorescence is fully emerged from the leaf sheath, flowers all open together, starting at night, completing the process in the morning and withering by the next night when the peduncle starts to bend down. Each capsule may contain up to 450 small seeds, each about 1 x 3 mm.

The flowers are tristylous. They have six stamens and one style, arranged in three possible configurations (floral trimorphism) - with short style (and medium and long stamens), medium style (short and long stamens) or long style (short and medium stamens). The medium style form is genetically dominant and is by far the commonest form in almost all infested areas. The short-styled form is only known from South America, whereas the long-styled form is found commonly in South America, more rarely in South-East Asia and very rarely in Africa. Only in Sri Lanka is the long-styled the commonest form. Some other tristylous species show incompatibility between the different forms but E. crassipes does not. Hence pollination (mainly by wind) can result in good seed set, though in some populations there may be a higher degree of self-incompatibility.
Diagram Video 1. Description Eicchornia crassipes

DISTRIBUSI
E. crassipes originated in tropical South America, but is now naturalized in Africa, Australia, India and many other countries

HABITAT
E. crassipes is a floating weed of tropical and sub-tropical freshwater lakes and rivers, especially those enriched with plant nutrients. It may also be a weed in flooded rice.

Uses List


Animal feed, fodder, forage

  • Fodder/animal feed

Environmental

  • Soil improvement

Fuels

  • Biofuels

General

  • Ornamental

LOCATION
            Eicchornia crassipes can found at Kebun Botani Zona 1 Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia (UPI)

REFERENCES

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