tall cottongrass

(Eriophorum angustifolium ssp. angustifolium)

Conservation Status
tall cottongrass
Photo by Dan W. Andree
  IUCN Red List

LC - Least Concern

     
  NatureServe

NNR - Unranked

SNR - Unranked

     
  Minnesota

not listed

     
           
Wetland Indicator Status
     
  Great Plains

OBL - Obligate wetland

     
  Midwest

OBL - Obligate wetland

     
  Northcentral & Northeast

OBL - Obligate wetland

     
           
 
Description
 
 

Tall cottongrass is a showy, early season sedge. It is native to Europe, western Asia, and North America. It occurs across the northern third of the continental United States from Maine to New York, west to Washington and Oregon, and south along the Rocky Mountains in Colorado and northern New Mexico. In Minnesota it is very common in the wetter northern half of the state, less common in the drier southern half. In the north it is found in many wet habitats, including conifer swamps, edges of marshes and lakes, fens, and ditches. In the south it is found in calcareous fens, sedge meadows, and marshy depressions in prairies. It grows under full or partial sun, usually in peaty soil but sometimes in wet, poorly drained, sandy or loamy soil. It tolerates both acidic soil in bogs and limey (calcareous) soil in fens.

Tall cottongrass is an 8 to 40 (20 to 100 cm) tall, erect, perennial sedge. It often forms loose colonies. Single stems (culms) rise from a long, creeping, underground, horizontal stem (rhizome). The rhizome is up to 8 (20 cm) long.

The culms are unbranched and slender, 132 (1.0 to 1.2 mm) in diameter near the top. They are solid and almost round in cross section.

Both basal and stem leaves are produced. Basal and lower stem leaves are up to 16 (40 cm) long and to ¼ wide. The blade is flat at the base becoming channeled and triangular in cross section just near the tip. The base of the leaf (sheath), where it wraps completely around the stem, has a dark, reddish tinged band near the top. Upper stem leaves are 1½ to 4 (4 to 10 cm) long and 116 to 316 (2.0 to 4.5 mm) wide. On the uppermost leaf the blade is much longer than the sheath.

The inflorescence is a cluster of 3 to 10 stalked spikelets at the end of the culm. Each spikelet is egg-shaped, is to ¾ (10 to 20 mm) long when in flower, and is subtended by 1 to 3 modified leaves (bracts). The bracts are leaf-like, are dark red at the base, and often have a black sheath. The longest bract is to 4¾ (1 to 12 cm) long, reaching to or beyond the top of the inflorescence. The central spikelet attaches to the culm without a stalk (peduncle). The remaining spikelets are on 316 to ¼ (5 to 6 mm) long peduncles. The longest peduncles are drooping.

Each spikelet consists of 20 to 200 overlapping, spirally arranged scales, each scale with its own flower. The scales are lance-shaped or egg-shaped, 3 16 to (5 to 10 mm) long. They have a single prominent midrib that does not quite reach the tip, and no lateral ribs. They are brown to gray at the base, clear at the tip.

The flowers are minute. They have no sepals, no petals, 3 stamens, and 1 style. They have numerous hair-like bristles that elongate as the fruit matures, forming a conspicuous cottony tuft. The bristles are to 1316 (15 to 30 mm) long and are usually white, sometimes pale yellowish-brown.

When in fruit, spikelets are ¾ to 2 (20 to 50 mm) long. The fruit is a dry, black, three angled, 116to (2 to 5 mm) long, seed capsule (achene) with one seed.

 
     
 

Height

 
 

8 to 40 (20 to 100 cm)

 
     
 

Similar Species

 
     
     
 
Habitat
 
 

Conifer swamps, edges of marshes and lakes, fens, sedge meadows, marshy depressions in prairies, and ditches

 
     
 
Ecology
 
 

Flowering

 
 

Late April to mid-May

 
     
 

Maturing

 
 

Late May to early August

 
     
 

Pests and Diseases

 
 

 

 
     
 
Use
 
 

 

 
     
 
Distribution
 
 

Distribution Map

 

Sources

2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 24, 28, 29, 30, 84.

 
  7/10/2023      
         
 

Nativity

 
 

Native

One author (Kartesz, 1999) considers the attribution of Eriophorum angustifolium ssp. angustifolium to North America to be erroneous.

 
         
 

Occurrence

 
 

Common

 
         
 
Taxonomy
 
  Kingdom Plantae (green algae and land plants)  
  Subkingdom Viridiplantae (green plants)  
  Infrakingdom Streptophyta (land plants and green algae)  
  Superdivision Embryophyta (land plants)  
  Division Tracheophyta (vascular plants)  
  Subdivision Spermatophytina (seed plants)  
  Class Liliopsida (monocots)  
 

Order

Poales (grasses, sedges, cattails, and allies)  
 

Family

Cyperaceae (sedges)  
  Subfamily Cyperoideae  
  Tribe Scirpeae  
 

Genus

Eriophorum (cottongrass)  
  Species Eriophorum angustifolium (common cotton-grass)  
       
 

Subordinate Taxa

 
 

 

 
       
 

Synonyms

 
 

Eriophorum angustifolium ssp. scabriusculum

Eriophorum angustifolium ssp. subarcticum

Eriophorum angustifolium ssp. subarcticum var. coloratum

Eriophorum angustifolium ssp. subarcticum var. majus

Eriophorum angustifolium ssp. subarcticum var. subarcticum

Eriophorum angustifolium var. coloratum

Eriophorum angustifolium var. giganteum

Eriophorum angustifolium var. majus

Eriophorum polystachion

 
       
 

Common Names

 
 

narrowleaf cotton-grass

tall cottongrass

tall cotton-grass

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Glossary

Achene

A dry, one-chambered, single-seeded seed capsule, formed from a single carpel, with the seed attached to the membranous outer layer (wall) only by the seed stalk; the wall, formed entirely from the wall of the superior ovary, does not split open at maturity, but relies on decay or predation to release the contents.

 

Bract

Modified leaf at the base of a flower stalk, flower cluster, or inflorescence.

 

Calcareous

Alkaline; rich in limestone; containing a high proportion of calcium carbonate.

 

Culm

The hollow or pithy stem of a grass, sedge, or rush.

 

Peduncle

In angiosperms, the stalk of a single flower or a flower cluster; in club mosses, the stalk of a strobilus or a group of strobili.

 

Rhizome

A horizontal, usually underground stem. It serves as a reproductive structure, producing roots below and shoots above at the nodes.

 

Sheath

The lower part of the leaf that surrounds the stem.

 

 

 

 

 
 
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Dan W. Andree

 
 

I came across these unusual white fluffy plants at Twin Valley Prairie SNA June 8, 2023. They look like they were some kind of plant that maybe bloomed then went to seed like in the photos.

  tall cottongrass  
           
 
MinnesotaSeasons.com Photos
 
 

Plants

 
    tall cottongrass   tall cottongrass  
           
    tall cottongrass   tall cottongrass  
           
    tall cottongrass      
           
 

Infructescence

 
    tall cottongrass   tall cottongrass  
           
    tall cottongrass      

 

Camera

     
 
Slideshows
 
Eriophorum angustifolium - tall cottongrass
Matt Lavin
  Eriophorum angustifolium - tall cottongrass  
 
About

Tall cottongrass is a native rhizomatous perennial cottongrass common in wetlands where it often grows in standing water. The inflorescence comprises several pedunculate nodding to drooping spikelets that are subtended by at least two well developed inflorescence (involucral) bracts. The translucent flower bracts lack a prominent midrib or at least a midvein that does not extend to the tip of the bract.

 

 

slideshow

       
 
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Other Videos
 
  narrow-leaved cotton grass - Eriophorrm angustifolium. Identification and characteristics
Coastal Plants of BC - UBC Forestry
 
   
 
About

Dec 6, 2018

Coastal Indicator Plants of British Columbia.
narrow-leaved cotton grass - Eriophorrm angustifolium.
University of British Columbia - Faculty of Forestry.
Illustration Credit: Hitchcock, C. Leo, and Arthur Cronquist. Flora of the Pacific Northwest: An Illustrated Manual © 1973. Reprinted with permission of the University of Washington Press.

 
  How to Identifu Eriophorum viridi carinatum and angustifolium
NY Flora
 
   
 
About

Nov 11, 2015

 
  Fluffy white heads of Eriophorum angustifolium, common cottongrass in peat meadow
NatureFootage
 
   
 
About

Oct 16, 2019

Largest collection of common cottongrass, peat meadow, Cottongrass, Eriophorum angustifolium, Meadow stock video footage. https://www.naturefootage.com/video-clips/TVG191016_0010/fluffy-white-heads-of-eriophorum-angustifolium--common-cottongrass-in-peat-meadow Fluffy white heads of Eriophorum angustifolium, common cottongrass in peat meadow

 
  Common cottongrass (Eriophorum angustifolium) - 2013-06-23
Westdelta
 
   
 
About

Jun 26, 2013

Eriophorum angustifolium, commonly known as common cottongrass or common cottonsedge, is a species of flowering plant in the sedge family Cyperaceae.

Geo location: 52.04958 4.22844

 

 

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  Dan W. Andree
6/8/2023

Location: Twin Valley Prairie SNA

I came across these unusual white fluffy plants at Twin Valley Prairie SNA June 8, 2023. They look like they were some kind of plant that maybe bloomed then went to seed like in the photos.

tall cottongrass

 
           
 
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Created: 7/10/2023

Last Updated:

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