Herbs, annual, relatively slender, to 25 cm; rhizomes absent. Leaves: submersed leaves mostly present, sessile; emersed leaves with petioles 4--5-ridged, 1.2--9.5 cm; blade with translucent markings absent, linear, 1--7.4 × 0.2--0.5 cm, base attenuate; if emersed, narrowly lanceolate to ovate. Inflorescences umbels, rarely racemes, of 1--2 whorls, each 4--6-flowered, erect, to 6 ´ 8 cm, not proliferating; peduncles terete, 1.2--4 cm; rachis absent or if present, terete; bracts connate ca. ½ length, deltate, 2.8--4.9 mm, coarse, margins delicate; pedicels spreading, 0.5--3 cm. Flowers 6--8 mm wide; sepals slightly appressed, 3--5-veined, veins not papillate; petals clawed; stamens 9; anthers basifixed; pistils 15--20. Fruits obovate, flattened, 0--3-ribbed, not abaxially keeled, 0.8--1.5 ´ 0.8--1 mm, glands absent; beak lateral, 0.1--0.2 mm. Chromosome number unknown. Flowering summer--fall. Sandy soil along margins of small streams or lakes; 0--1500 m; Ala., Conn., Fla., Ga., Ill., Kans., Mass., Mich., N.Y., S.C., Tex., Vt.; se Mexico; West Indies; Central America (Guatemala, Nicaragua); South America. Echinodorus tenellus has often been separated into two species, one in North America and the other in the tropics. Whenever Echinodorus is studied throughout the range, differences between the two species break down, and a continuum exists from one species to the next. We recognize that overlap; therefore we are combining E. parvulus with E. tenellus.
Delicate stoloniferous perennial, simple, erect, to 1 dm; lvs with long-petiolate, linear to more often elliptic or lanceolate blade 1-3 cm, or phyllodial and bladeless when submersed; fls in 1 (or 2) whorls of 3-6, the slender pedicels usually recurved at the tip; bracts minute, 1-3 mm; sep orbicular-ovate, 1-2 mm, appressed in fr; pet white or pink, suborbicular, 1-3 mm; stamens 6 or 9; anthers basifixed, 0.2 mm; achenes 10-20 in a loose head, dark red to nearly black, 1 mm, 8-ribbed, virtually beakless. In mud or wet sand or shallow water; trop. Amer., n. to se. U.S. and irregularly in the Atlantic states (mainly on the coastal plain) to Mass. (where now wanting), and up the Mississippi R. to Ill. and Mo.; irregularly to Kans., sw. Ky., and formerly Mich. Our plants, as here described, are var. parvulus (Engelm.) Fassett. (E. parvulus)
Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.