@article {181, title = {Contributions to Western Botany, No. 7}, journal = {Proc. Cal. Acad. Sci. (Ser. 2)}, volume = {5}, year = {1895}, note = {Erstbeschreibung Triglochin maritimum var. debile M.E. Jones, page 722}, pages = {611-732}, abstract = {

Triglochin maritimum var. debile No. 5289. May 23, 1894, Johnson, Utah, 5000\° alt., in alkaline clay. Flowers simply racemose on the slender, weak stems, which are 6-12\&$\#$39; high; roots very thick; leaves all radical and short. This plant is much smaller than T. palustre, but in the characters of the flowers and fruit certainly belongs to T. maritimum. Watson\&$\#$39;s T. palustre of King\&$\#$39;s Report is a taller form of the same. This grows on clayey alkaline flats at Johnson, Utah, where no other plant will grow.

}, keywords = {alkaline flats, T. maritimum var. debile, Triglochin, USA, Utah}, url = {http://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/32283410}, author = {Jones, Marcus Eugene} }