Juncus L.
Annual or perennial herbs, tufted or rhizomatous, glabrous. Leaves flat and grass-like, or tubular or laterally compressed with internal septa, or channelled, or terete and stem-like, or reduced to basal sheaths. Inflorescence a many-flowered cyme, much-branched or condensed to a compact head, or flowers rarely few or solitary. Flowers usually hermaphrodite, sessile or pedicellate. Tepals 6, rarely 4, lanceolate, the outer usually longer, slightly more rigid with narrow membranous margin, inner with broader membranous margin. Stamens 6, 3, or variable 3-6. Ovary unilocular, or triseptate, or trilocular. Seeds numerous, often tailed at one or both ends. A cosmopolitan genus of c. 300 spp. Native spp. 16, adventive 31.
SYNOPSIS
- A. Sect. POIOPHYLLI:
- Plant tufted or rhizomatous; stems usually leafy, rarely only basal sheaths present; leaves flat or channelled, rarely cylindrical; inflorescence terminal:
- 1. *ambiguus, 2. *bufonius, 3. *dichotomus, 4. *gerardii, 5. *homalocaulis, 6. *imbricatus var. chamissonis, 7. *squarrosus, 8. *tenuis
- B. Sect. GENUINI:
- Plant rhizomatous; stems with no true leaves and only basal sheaths; inflorescence apparently lateral
- (a)
- Stems light-, bright- or dark green, or red-brown, usually shining, smooth:
- 10. *conglomeratus, 11. *continuus, 12. *effusus, 14. *flavidus, 16. *procerus, 18. australis, 19. distegus, 20. gregiflorus, 21. pallidus, 22. pauciflorus
- (b)
- Stems blue-green or light green, dull, ridged:
- 9. *amabilis, 13. *filicaulis, 15. *inflexus, 17. *subsecundus, 23. sarophorus, 24. usitatus
- C. Sect. THALASSII:
- Plant rhizomatous; stems with 1-2 terete, green leaves as well as basal sheaths; inflorescence apparently lateral:
- 25. *acutus, 26. maritimus var. australiensis
- D. Sect. SEPTATI:
- Plant tufted or rhizomatous; stems with transversely-septate leaves, both basal and cauline, sheaths with obtuse auricles; inflorescence terminal:
- 27. *acuminatus, 28. *acutiflorus, 29. *articulatus, 30. *brachycarpus, 31. *bulbosus, 32. *canadensis, 33. *ensifolius, 34. *fockei, 35. *microcephalus, 36. *subnodulosus, 37. holoschoenus, 38. novae-zelandiae, 39. prismatocarpus, 40. pusillus, 41. scheuchzerioides
- E. Sect. GRAMINIFOLII:
- Plant tufted; stems with many basal non-septate leaves, sheaths without auricles; inflorescence terminal:
- 42. *capitatus, 43. *dregeanus, 44. *lomatophyllus, 45. antarcticus, 46. caespiticius, 47. planifolius
Key
Most spp. flower between November and January, and seed is set from January to February.
The leafless species (sect. Genuini) with their easily recognised habit - woody rhizomes, dense clumps of erect, rigid, ± cylindrical, acute-tipped stems with mucronate basal sheaths, and apparently lateral heads - are known by the Maori name "wiwi" and the standard common name "rushes".
In the field, the name "rushes" is applied in a broad sense to include a number of plants with this characteristic habit, which belong to related families. Many such plants are commonly confused, especially in the non-flowering state, with the true rushes, and include spp. of Baumea, Eleocharis, Lepidosperma, Schoenus, Scirpus and Tetraria (Cyperaceae), and Empodisma (Calorophus) and Leptocarpus (Restionaceae). These have been keyed out, on vegetative characters, in Healy, Identification Weeds & Clovers 1976, 130-137.
The septate-leaved spp. (sect. Septati) are distinctive, and cannot be confused with plants of any other monocotyledonous group. The non-septate and grassy-leaved spp. (sect. Poiophylli, sect. Graminifolii) may be, and are often confused with grasses (Gramineae) and sedges (Cyperaceae - Carex, Scirpus); the tabulation should assist in differentiating members of the three families:
Spp.of Juncus have a preference for, and are often characteristic of damp to swampy habitats, but this is not invariable. Both leafy and leafless spp. can establish successfully in bared sites on dry soils where there is little competition.
The reaction of leafless rushes to chemical herbicides merits mention: spp. with entire cobwebby pith and soft, green, non-ridged stems are most susceptible, while those lacking pith or with much interrupted pith and hard, blue-green, strongly ridged stems are resistant or only slightly susceptible. Spp. With dense pith - entire or interrupted by cavities - and wiry ridged or non-ridged stems are intermediate in susceptibility.
Character | Juncaceae | Cyperaceae | Graminae |
---|---|---|---|
Leaf arrangement | in three rows | usually in three rows | in two rows |
Leaf sheath | split or not split | never split | split or not split |
Leaf lamina | if present, flat, folded or rolled: margins smooth: reduced to basal sheaths in sect. Genuini | usually folded: margins rough | flat, folded or rolled: margins smooth or rough |
Ligule | absent | partially fused to upper surface of lamina | not fused to upper surface of lamina: rarely absent |
Auricles | present or absent | absent | present or absent |
Stem | round to ± compressed, solid or with pith, smooth: nodes not conspicuous | usually 3-angled occasionally round solid or with pith: angles often rough: nodes not conspicuous | round to ± compressed, usually hollow: nodes solid often conspicuous |
Flowers | tepals in two whorls | without evident calyx and corolla each in axil of 1 bract, the glume | without evident calyx and corolla, each within 2 bracts, lemma and palea |
Stamens | anthers basifixed | anthers basifixed | anthers dorsifixed |
Fruit | a 3-locular, 3-many-seeded capsule | a nut | a caryopsis |