Giant bur-reed (Sparganium eurycarpum) flowerheads and fruit. (1) An inflorescence of giant bur-reed. The male (♂︎) flowerheads are distributed across the upper portions of the inflorescence; the female (♀︎) flowerheads are restricted to the bottom. (2) A female flowerhead with white styles that bear bifurcated stigmas (a species-specific character). (3) A female flowerhead post-fertilization; the stigmas are withering. (4) Immature male flowerheads (top two yellow-green spheres) and mature male flowerheads below with their radiating stamens bearing yellow anthers at their tips. (5) A female flowerhead in which the florets are enlarging as the contained seeds develop.
The central stem of giant bur-reed produces an inflorescence at its tip with 1-6 female flowers in the lower parts of each branch of the inflorescence and up to 20 male flowers in the upper parts. (Male and female flowers are separate and distinct.) Male (staminate) flowerheads look like a fireworks-burst of white filaments and yellow-brown anthers; individual florets are densely packed, each with five stamens with white filaments and a yellow to brown anther. The female flowerheads are greenish and “prickly” with prominent green cones (the female florets) covering the surface; each pistillate floret has a basal green ovary covered with scale-like tepals with dark tips and an apical white style bearing two white stigmas. Giant bur-reed is wind pollinated. In fruiting flowerheads, the stigmas turn dark and wither but do not drop off; the florets elongate and widen, turning brown as the fruits on the seedhead ripen. The fruit is a brown seed 5-10 mm long and nearly as wide, shaped like an inverted pyramid that abruptly narrows to a 2-4 mm long apical beak (the style remnant). Giant bur-reed is superficially sedge-like but instead is more closely related to cattails. Giant bur-reed prefers wet conditions (up to a foot of water) with minimal waves and gentle currents.
Giant bur-reed (Sparganium eurycarpum) leaves. The upper surface of the leaves bears a median groove (which can be seen in lower right quarter of the image). The overall “V” shape of the leaf and the median keel on the underside can be seen in the leaf that arches across the image from lower left to upper right.
Giant bur-reed is a native, semi-aquatic (emergent) species that grows to 2-6 feet tall. The leaves are erect to ascending, alternate, grass-like, and parallel-veined. The leaves are up to five feet long with a distinct keel on the underside.
Giant bur-reed (Sparganium eurycarpum) plants growing near the eastern shore of East Lagoon. Several inflorescences are visible. In the lower right corner are enlarged images of a female flowerhead (below) and a male flowerhead (above).
Giant bur-reed is a native, semi-aquatic (emergent) species that grows to 2-6 feet tall. The leaves are erect to ascending, alternate, grass-like, and parallel-veined. The leaves are up to five feet long with a distinct keel on the underside. The central stem produces an inflorescence at its tip with 1-6 female flowers in the lower parts of each branch of the inflorescence and up to 20 male flowers in the upper parts. (Male and female flowers are separate and distinct.) Male (staminate) flowerheads look like a fireworks-burst of white filaments and yellow-brown stamens; individual florets are densely packed, each with five stamens with white filaments and a yellow to brown anther. The female flowerheads are greenish and “prickly” with prominent green cones (the female florets) covering the surface; each pistillate floret has a basal green ovary covered with scale-like tepals with dark tips and an apical white style bearing two white stigmas. Giant bur-reed is wind pollinated. In fruiting flowerheads, the stigmas turn dark and wither but do not drop off; the florets elongate and widen, turning brown as the fruits on the seedhead ripen. The fruit is a brown seed 5-10 mm long and nearly as wide, shaped like an inverted pyramid that abruptly narrows to a 2-4 mm long apical beak (the style remnant). Giant bur-reed is superficially sedge-like but instead is more closely related to cattails. Giant bur-reed prefers wet conditions (up to a foot of water) with minimal waves and gentle currents.

