Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 22, 1956
The Discovery of Myriophyllum
in Crater Lake
By John R. Rowley and Joanne S. Rowley
University of Minnesota
Among the adventurously inclined,
flower hunting may seem a poor substitute for arctic exploration or
hunting elephants. Searching for aquatic flowering plants in Crater
Lake, however, has an element of excitement which we believe greatly
exceeds the general impression of such endeavor. Besides the
exhilaration of just being on Crater Lake with its beautiful water
encircled by the sheer cliffs of the caldera, the scarcity of flowering
aquatics in the lake makes new discoveries especially rare and
thrilling. Until recently only four species, occurring in small isolated
colonies, were known (Rowles & Fairbanks 1954). Another intriguing
factor is the great depth at which plants generally occurring in shallow
water are found in this lake.

Drawing made from the whorl-leaved milfoil
collected in Crater Lake. |
During the 1956 summer, after searching
much of the shore area of Crater Lake, we located a spot to the
northwest of Wizard Island which seemed to have a colony of plants of
some kind growing on the rocky bottom. Grappling for the suspected
plants in 20 to 25 feet of water was a slow process due to a wind which
greatly reduced visibility and made boat operation difficult. After
several unsuccessful attempts we brought up a water-milfoil, a plant
which had never been reported before in Crater Lake National Park.
There was no doubt that the new plant
was water-milfoil and belonged to the genus Myriophyllum, for
this genus is a distinctive assemblage of plants. Determination of the
species was more difficult since keys to species of Myriophyllum
depend in large part upon flowers, fruits and emergent leaves and we had
only the submerged leaves and stem (Fig. 1). Our new plant could be any
of the three major species in Oregon: American milfoil (Myriophyllum
exalbescens Fernald), whorl-leaved milfoil (M. verticillatum
L.), or western milfoil (M. hippurioides Nutt.).
The morphological features of the
submerged leaves, such as the number of leaf whorls at each node and the
number of leaflets per leaf, and the reported ecological distribution of
these three species were compared with the Crater Lake plant by Richard
McP. Brown, assistant park naturalist at Crater Lake National Park,
Doctors J. W. Moore and T. Morley, Department of Botany, University of
Minnesota, and ourselves. We have each independently concluded that
Myriophyllum verticillatum
is the most likely possibility, although a more positive identification
must await the acquisition of emergent leaves and flowering material.
References
ROWLEY, JOHN R., and FAIRBANKS, C.
WARREN, 1954. "Aquatic flowering plants of Crater Lake." Nature Notes
from Crater Lake 20:36-39.