Saltmarsh sand-spurry (Spergularia salina) flowers. In all three images, note the glandular hairs covering the exterior of the five sepals. Bottom right: a saltmarsh sand-spurry flower in three-quarters view. The three white styles are visible in the center of the flower at the tip of the pale-yellow ovary. Top: a saltmarsh sand-spurry flower seen from the side. The styles, ovary, and the stamens are all visible; the relative lengths of the green sepals and the pinkish-purple petals is apparent. Bottom left: another saltmarsh sand-spurry flower in three-quarters view. This flower has apparently been fertilized — the styles have disappeared and the ovary is significantly enlarged.
Saltmarsh sand-spurry flowers consist of five elliptical green sepals, five white to pink petals slightly longer than the sepals, 2-5 stamens with bright yellow anthers, and three short (0.7 mm), thread-like styles and three stigmas. In the Great Lakes region, saltmarsh sand-spurry is widely present along roads where salt is used as a de-icer. Some sources refer to this plant as Spergularia marina, but ITIS rejects that binomial; Spergularia salina is the accepted name.
Saltmarsh sand-spurry (Spergularia salina) stems and leaves. Left: a flower stalk with a pair of opposite leaves above and a whorl of half a dozen leaves below. Top right: a stalk with multiple leaves at nodes. Bottom right: a main stalk of saltmarsh sand-spurry, reddish-purple in color, with crowded nodes of the spike-like leaves.
Saltmarsh sand-spurry is an Old World plant originally adapted to marine beaches and salt marshes. However, it has been widely introduced and is now virtually cosmopolitan in saline (salty) habitats. The plant is short (3-10″ tall) with delicate stems (0.6-2 mm in diameter) that may be erect or sprawling, usually much branched near the base. The leaves are dark green, 1/2-1.5″ long and often described as “broadly triangular” (longer than wide) but I think better descriptors would be “awl-like” or “spike-like.” The leaves are either opposite or in whorls, have a single prominent vein (the midvein) and a tip that is blunt or ends in an abrupt, sharp point.
A saltmarsh sand-spurry (Spergularia salina) plant growing just east of Cornell Drive, west of Columbia Basin
Saltmarsh sand-spurry is an Old World plant originally adapted to marine beaches and salt marshes. However, it has been widely introduced and is now virtually cosmopolitan in saline (salty) habitats. The plant is short (3-10″ tall) with delicate stems (0.6-2 mm in diameter) that may be erect or sprawling, usually much branched near the base. The leaves are dark green, 1/2-1.5″ long and often described as “broadly triangular” (longer than wide) but I think better descriptors would be “awl-like” or “spike-like.” The leaves are either opposite or in whorls, have a single prominent vein (the midvein) and a tip that is blunt or ends in an abrupt, sharp point. The flowers consist of five elliptical green sepals, five white to pink petals slightly longer than the sepals, 2-5 stamens with bright yellow anthers, and three short (0.7 mm), thread-like styles and three stigmas. In the Great Lakes region, saltmarsh sand-spurry is widely present along roads where salt is used as a de-icer. Some sources refer to this plant as Spergularia marina, but ITIS rejects that binomial; Spergularia salina is the accepted name.
