ID	ModifiedOn	Contributors	InformalClassification	Family	TaxonID	TaxonName	SeeAlso	NameRank	Hybrid	TerminalTaxon	Excluded	Peripheral	Waif	Endemic	Extirpated	OriginCode	Origin	Distribution	Voucher	Comments
5865	2018-05-02 22:04:00		Vascular Plants: Monocots	Typhaceae	161342	Sparganium		genus		N	N	N	N	N	N	N	Native			
5866	2024-01-14 10:31:16		Vascular Plants: Monocots	Typhaceae	161352	Sparganium angustifolium		species		Y	N	N	N	N	N	N	Native	Occurring on both sides of the Cascades crest in Washington;	{"Herbarium":"WTU"}	
5867	2024-01-14 10:36:38		Vascular Plants: Monocots	Typhaceae	161360	Sparganium emersum	Sparganium angustifolium	species		Y	N	N	N	N	N	N	Native	Occurring on both sides of the Cascades crest in Washington;	{"Herbarium":"WTU"}	
5868	2024-01-14 11:21:40		Vascular Plants: Monocots	Typhaceae	161368	Sparganium eurycarpum		species		Y	N	N	N	N	N	N	Native	Occurring on both sides of the Cascades crest in Washington;	{"Herbarium":"WTU"}	
5869	2024-01-14 11:25:44		Vascular Plants: Monocots	Typhaceae	161373	Sparganium fluctuans		species		Y	N	N	N	N	N	N	Native	Occurring chiefly west of the Cascades crest in Washington;	{"Herbarium":"WTU"}	
5870	2024-01-14 11:29:01		Vascular Plants: Monocots	Typhaceae	161379	Sparganium natans		species		Y	N	N	N	N	N	N	Native	Occurring on both sides of the Cascades crest in Washington;	{"Herbarium":"WTU"}	
5871	2018-05-02 22:04:00		Vascular Plants: Monocots	Typhaceae	161385	Typha		genus		N	N	N	N	N	N	N	Native			
5872	2019-07-08 15:55:42		Vascular Plants: Monocots	Typhaceae	161386	Typha angustifolia		species		Y	N	N	N	N	N	I	Introduced from Europe and/or eastern North America	Occurring on both sides of the Cascades crest in Washington;	{"Herbarium":"WTU"}	FNA22:"Prior to N. Hotchkiss and H. L. Dozier (1949), Typha domingensis was generally included within T. angustifolia in North America. Because of many misidentified specimens, range expansion in recent years, and undercollecting, the distribution on the margins of the main range is somewhat uncertain. Many literature reports are based on misidentified specimens. Some workers suggested T. angustifolia was early introduced from Europe into Atlantic Coastal North America and migrated westward (R. L. Stuckey and D. P. Salamon 1987). In recent decades it has expanded its range in many regions and become much more abundant, especially in roadside ditches and other highly disturbed habitats. For example, although it was known only from one Wisconsin station in 1929 (N. C. Fassett 1930) and was very local in Iowa in 1939 (A. Hayden 1939), it is now common and widespread in both states. As it often out-competes many native marsh species to produce very dense, pure stands, and hybridizes with T. latifolia to form the probably even more competitive T. glauca, T. angustifolia and T. glauca should perhaps be classified as noxious weeds in parts of North America. Beyond the main range of T. angustifolia, there are specimens of T. glauca from north-central Montana (Phillips County.), west-central Manitoba (La Pas), and Anticosti Island, Quebec. There are m Many erroneous reports have come from outside of Europe and North America. For hybrids see also genus and key."
5873	2024-01-14 17:19:21		Vascular Plants: Monocots	Typhaceae	161390	Typha domingensis		species		Y	N	N	N	N	N	I	Introduced from central and South America	Occurring on both sides of the Cascades crest in Washington;	{"Herbarium":"WTU"}	Historically in our area this species has not been known north of California and Nevada.  In addition to the WA specimens, it has recently (2017) been collected along the Columbia River in Oregon.  Whether these populations should be considered range expansions of a native species or dispersal events of an introduced species can\'t be clearly resolved with the information currently available.<br><br>FNA22: "Typha domingensis probably should be treated as a highly variable pantropic and warm temperate species, occurring to 40º E north and south latitude worldwide, and needing study to determine infraspecific taxa and delimitation from related species (B. G. Briggs and L. A. S. Johnson and B. G. Briggs 1968; S. G. Smith 1987)."
5874	2024-01-14 17:27:03		Vascular Plants: Monocots	Typhaceae	161391	Typha glauca		species	named	Y	N	N	N	N	N	I	Introduced	Occurring on both sides of the Cascades crest in Washington;	{"Herbarium":"WTU"}	Hybrid of T angustifolia and T. latifolia.
5875	2024-01-14 17:22:33		Vascular Plants: Monocots	Typhaceae	161392	Typha latifolia		species		Y	N	N	N	N	N	N	Native	Occurring on both sides of the Cascades crest in Washington;	{"Herbarium":"WTU"}	FNA22: "The erect shoots of Typha latifolia are more fanlike when young than in other North American species because the proximal leaves (dying by mid season) spread more widely. Undoubtedly native throughout its North American range, where it is often a codominant or minor component of marshes, wet meadows, fens, and other communities. In many places it is apparently being replaced by T. angustifolia and T. angustifolia  T. latifolia (T. glauca) at least partly due to human disturbance of habitats. There is a specimen of T. xglauca from Anticosti Island, Quebec. Locally in California and perhaps elsewhere where hybrids are common, the pollen grains of some T. latifolia plants separate slightly and may be shed partly as mixtures of triads, dyads, and monads, perhaps due to introgression ([S. G. Smith, unpublisheddeletion.). Ph.D. thesis]. See also hybrids in key and genus."
5876	2003-10-21 00:00:00	Fred Weinmann	Vascular Plants: Monocots	Typhaceae	161393	Typhaceae		family		N	N	N	N	N	N	N	Native			
