Utricularia minor : Lesser Bladderwort

Taxonomy

Scientific Name:

Kingdom: Plantae

Division:

Class: Dicoteldonae (two seed-leaves)

Family: Lentibulariaceae (Bladderwort Family)

Genera: Utricularia (Bladderwort) (Lat. utriclus = little bag or bottle; referring to the small bladders on the leaves)

Species: minor (Lat. minor= lesser; referring to the small size of the bladder and flowers)

English Name(s):

Lesser Bladderwort,

First Nation Names:



Description

Structure:

  • Delicate, nonrooting, aquatic, perennial, herbaceous (not woody) plants.
  • Stems very slender.
  • Bladders usually few, borne on leaves.

Leaves:

  • Leaves alternate, submerged, finely divided, pale green.
  • Some bearing bladders.
  • 1-2mm wide by4-9mm long.
  • Segments flat, linear in shape.
  • Margins not serrulate (fine toothed).

Reproductive Parts:

  • Scapes (flower stalks) 5-12cm high, 2-9 flowered.
  • Corolla (united petals) yellow, 5-8mm long, with a very short spur (point).

Seed:

  • Capsules on recurved pedicels (stalks).
  • Seeds wrinkled and numerous.

Not to Be Confused With:


Biology

Physiology:

  • Plants often reproduce by means of turions (buds) or winter buds.
  • Turions or winter buds, which form at the tip of branches, drop off in autumn when the branch dies and fall to the bottom where they will sprout new plants the following spring.
  • Bladders act as both floats and insect traps.
  • Bladders are born on the branches will act as floats by filling with gas when the plant is ready to flower. Once bouyant the plant foats up from the bottom to the surface where its flowering stalk can rise out of the water.
  • Bladders can retain enough water to keep the plant alive for a long period if the pond dries up.
  • Bladders have appendages on the sides at their enterance. These appendages are triggered by prey swimming past. They cause the enterance to open sucking in water and the prey with it. Once prey are inside the entereance closes and digestive enzymes are released into the bladder.

Life Cycle:

  • Perennial from over-wintering turions (plant buds) or winter buds.

Seasonal Cycle:

  • Whole plant is deciduous (dieing back).
  • Rarely flowers in Northern parts of its range which includes Yukon

Ecology

Animal Uses:

  • Some bacteria may live in the bladders and help digest the prey in a symbiotic relationship.

Habitat:

  • Shallow waters or sometimes emergent on the wet margins of pools.

Uses

Modern:

Industrial:

Medicinal:

    Food:

      Traditional Gwich'in:

      Folklore:

        Industrial:

          Medicinal:

            Food:

              Traditional Other:

              Folklore:

                Industrial:

                  Medicinal:

                    Food:

                      Images

                      Submersed plants


                      Flowering scapes


                      Illustration from: Illustrated Flora of BC


                      Range Maps

                      World Range: Circumpolar: In N.A. Greenland to NL and LB to AK, south to PA, OH, ND, CO, and CA

                      Prov/State Abrev. List


                      In Yukon: Uncommon north to about latitude 64.30'N

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