Narrow-leaved cattail (Typha angustifolia) flower spikes and flowers. Left: cattails produce only single-sex flowers. The upper spike consists only of male (staminate) flowers; the lower spike consists only of female (pistillate) flowers. The two spikes are always separated by a gap of 1/2-2″ in narrow-leaved cattails. Right: close-up images of the staminate flowers (upper image), here after they have released their pollen grains and are reduced to withered filaments, and pistillate flowers (lower image), mostly visible as the styles.
The stalk of narrow-leaved cattails terminates in two spikes of unisexual flowers separated by a distinct gap (at least 1/2″, usually several inches). The upper (staminate) spike is narrowly cylindrical, up to 8″ long and 1/2″ across, light yellow or light brown, and densely covered with staminate flowers (each bearing a single quartet of pollen grains) and numerous hairs. The lower (pistillate) spike is also cylindrical, up to 12″ long and 3/4″ across, brown or reddish brown in color, and densely covered with pistillate flowers and numerous hairs. The fertile pistillate flowers consist of a 1 mm long bractlet and a 1 mm long stipe that includes the ovary and a single, slender style; both are surrounded by several hairs. (Flora of North America and the Jepson Herbarium have nice illustrations.) The flowers are wind pollinated. Some pistillate flowers are infertile and lack ovaries. Fertilized flowers produce a naked seed attached by a stalk to a tuft of white fibers; the seeds are dispersed by the wind. Narrow-leaved cattail can grow on wet soil or in water up to a foot deep.
Narrow-leaved cattail (Typha angustifolia) stems and leaves. The plants are growing on the shore of the vestigial tongue of Jackson Park Inner Harbor that is west of Hayes Blvd. The harbor is visible through the arch of the bridge (left image) and on the eastern shore of East Lagoon (right image). The leaves are long (up to six feet), narrow (a half inch wide), and strap-like with parallel sides.
Narrow-leaved cattail is a native perennial that grows to 3-7 feet tall (mostly the flowering stalk). The flowering stalk is green, hairless, round in section and quite resistant to bending. The leaves arise from the base of the plant where they are wrapped in a sheath; they are 1.5-6 feet long and 1/2″ across, flat or slightly concave on the inner face of the blade, convex on the outer face, with parallel venation.
Narrow-leaved cattail (Typha angustifolia) plants growing on the southeast shore of East Lagoon. Note that all the cattail spikes are divided into distinct upper (male) and lower (female) sections.
Narrow-leaved cattail is a native perennial that grows to 3-7 feet tall (mostly the flowering stalk). The flowering stalk is green, hairless, round in section and quite resistant to bending. The leaves arise from the base of the plant where they are wrapped in a sheath; they are 1.5-6 feet long and 1/2″ across, flat or slightly concave on the inner face of the blade, convex on the outer face, with parallel venation. The stalk terminates in two spikes of unisexual flowers separated by a distinct gap (at least 1/2″, usually several inches). The upper (staminate) spike is narrowly cylindrical, up to 8″ long and 1/2″ across, light yellow or light brown, and densely covered with staminate flowers (each bearing a single quartet of pollen grains) and numerous hairs. The lower (pistillate) spike is also cylindrical, up to 12″ long and 3/4″ across, brown or reddish brown in color, and densely covered with pistillate flowers and numerous hairs. The fertile pistillate flowers consist of a 1 mm long bractlet and a 1 mm long stipe that includes the ovary and a single, slender style; both are surrounded by several hairs. (Flora of North America and the Jepson Herbarium have nice illustrations.) The flowers are wind pollinated. Some pistillate flowers are infertile and lack ovaries. Fertilized flowers produce a naked seed attached by a stalk to a tuft of white fibers; the seeds are dispersed by the wind. Narrow-leaved cattail can grow on wet soil or in water up to a foot deep.

