Sagittaria trifolia
Three-leaf arrowhead
- Category
- plantae
- Primary role
- weed
- Class
- Magnoliopsida
- Order
- Alismatales
- Family
- Alismataceae
- Genus
- Sagittaria
Plantae | Tracheophyta | Liliopsida | Alismatales | Alismataceae | Sagittaria
External: GBIF #5328972
0 AI-consensus-verified claims .
No verified claims involving this entity yet.
Aggregated via GloBI — not independently verified by AgroEco.
pollination 4
- GloBI pollinates Sagittaria trifolia Kato & Miura (1996). Flowering phenology and anthophilous insect community at a threatened natural lowland marsh at Nakaikemi in Tsuruga, Japan. Kyoto University, Vol. 29: 1-48
- GloBI pollinates Sagittaria trifolia Kato & Miura (1996). Flowering phenology and anthophilous insect community at a threatened natural lowland marsh at Nakaikemi in Tsuruga, Japan. Kyoto University, Vol. 29: 1-48
- GloBI visitsFlowersOf Sagittaria trifolia KATO, M. and MIURA, R., 1996. Flowering phenology and anthophilous insect community at a threatened natural lowland marsh at Nakaikemi in Tsuruga, Japan.
- GloBI visitsFlowersOf Sagittaria trifolia KATO, M. and MIURA, R., 1996. Flowering phenology and anthophilous insect community at a threatened natural lowland marsh at Nakaikemi in Tsuruga, Japan.
attractant 3
- GloBI pollinates Sagittaria trifolia Kato & Miura (1996). Flowering phenology and anthophilous insect community at a threatened natural lowland marsh at Nakaikemi in Tsuruga, Japan. Kyoto University, Vol. 29: 1-48
- GloBI visitsFlowersOf Sagittaria trifolia KATO, M. and MIURA, R., 1996. Flowering phenology and anthophilous insect community at a threatened natural lowland marsh at Nakaikemi in Tsuruga, Japan.
- GloBI visitsFlowersOf Sagittaria trifolia KATO, M. and MIURA, R., 1996. Flowering phenology and anthophilous insect community at a threatened natural lowland marsh at Nakaikemi in Tsuruga, Japan.
crop interaction 1
- GloBI pollinates Sagittaria trifolia Kato & Miura (1996). Flowering phenology and anthophilous insect community at a threatened natural lowland marsh at Nakaikemi in Tsuruga, Japan. Kyoto University, Vol. 29: 1-48