Arenaria L.
Sandwort.
Sp. Pl. 423. 1753.
Eremogone Fenzl, Verbreit. Alsin. 13, tab. ad 18. 1833.
(incl.)
Arenaria L. subgen. Eremogone (Fenzl) Fenzl
Vegetative morphology. Plants 0.515 cm high. Taproot present, or absent. Caudex present, or absent. Ground-level or under-ground stems horizontal, or vertical and often branched; rhizomatous, or stoloniferous; elongate, or compact; 0.33(7) mm wide. Aerial stems erect, or decumbent; glabrous. Leaves distributed along the stems, or in a basal tuft. Leaf blade bases cuneate, or attenuate. Blades 350 mm long; 0.52.5 mm wide. Blades appressed to the stem, or spreading; herbaceous, or somewhat fleshy; linear, or oblong, or lanceolate; flat, or folded; appearing single-veined, or with inconspicuous veins. Blades adaxial surface dull, or shiny; glabrous. Blades abaxial surface glabrous. Blade margins glabrous, or scabrous. Leaf apices acute, or mucronate.
Reproductive morphology. Flowering stems glabrous, or hairy. Flowering stem hairs puberulent; white or translucent. Flowers solitary, or in inflorescences. Inflorescence a dichasium. Flowers per inflorescence 16; small, less than 5 mm in diameter or length, or medium-sized, 515 mm in diameter or length. Calyx sepals 5; free; 36 mm long; 12.5 mm wide. Calyx green; herbaceous; glabrous. Petals same length as the calyx, or longer than the calyx; 5; white; obovate, or lanceolate; unlobed; 3.58 mm long. Stamens 10. Anthers yellow; ellipsoid, or ovoid; 0.20.8 mm long. Carpels 3. Ovaries ovate, or oblong. Styles 3; 0.82.5 mm long. Ovules 1035. Fruit elongate-cylindrical, or oblong; teeth 6. Fruit 47 mm long; 23.5 mm wide; yellowish. Seeds 0.61 mm long; brown; with surfaces verrucose.
Chromosome information. 2n = 22, 40 and 44 (in the eastern Canadian Arctic Archipelago, to 80 in Continental North American taxa).
Distribution. Northern hemisphere distribution: Greenland, Canada, United States, Eurasia.
Notes. Canadian authors, from Porsild (1957) to Scoggan (1978), have included Minuartia in a more widely circumscribed Arenaria. All or nearly all Eurasian authors (and Hultén for North America) have treated and treat Minuartia and Arenaria as separate genera. The present treatment follows Elven et al. (2002).
Illustrations. Arenaria capillaris. Plant densely tufted from a stout, somewhat woody base. Photo used in exhibit 'Wildflowers of Mount Revelstoke National Park'. CMN, Photo-library, 577769. Arenaria humifusa. Plant with tufted or loosely matted stems from a subterranean creeping rhizome. Greenland, Godhavn (Osterdal), July 21, 1960. Photographed by Raymond Wood. CMN, Photo-library, 578528.
Cite this publication as: ‘A.K. Brysting, P.J. Scott, and S.G. Aiken 2001 onwards. Caryophyllaceae of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago: Descriptions, Illustrations, Identification, and Information Retrieval. Version: 29th April 2003. http://www.mun.ca/biology/delta/arcticf/’. Dallwitz (1980), Dallwitz, Paine and Zurcher (1993, 1995, 2000) , and Aiken, Dallwitz et al. (1999) should also be cited (see References).