Amphibious Bistort - Persicaria amphibia

Description

Short to medium height (max 60 cm). It is a creeping plant rooting at the nodes, and has both terrestrial and aquatic forms. Flowers deep pink in short, dense, broad and often solitary spikes.

Similar Species

When on dry land, can be confused with other Persicaria

Identification difficulty
ID checklist (your specimen should have all of these features)

In flower, the stamens are exserted (stick out beyond the tepals).  Often several flowerheads per stem. Leaves can be black-blotched; truncate to cordate at base

Recording advice

Photos in aquatic state, or in flower showing stamens

Habitat

In or close to still or slow flowing water.

When to see it

June to September.

Life History

Perennial.

UK Status

Fairly frequent throughout Britain.

VC55 Status

Fairly frequent in Leicestershire and Rutland. In the 1979 Flora survey of Leicestershire it was found in 200 of the 617 tetrads.

In the current Checklist (Jeeves, 2011) it is listed as Native, Locally Frequent

 

Leicestershire & Rutland Map

MAP KEY:

Yellow squares = NBN records (all known data)
Coloured circles = NatureSpot records: 2020+ | 2015-2019 | pre-2015

UK Map

Species profile

Common names
Amphibious Bistort
Species group:
Wildflowers
Kingdom:
Plantae
Order:
Caryophyllales
Family:
Polygonaceae
Records on NatureSpot:
128
First record:
11/04/2004 (Nicholls, David)
Last record:
12/08/2023 (Willis, Jill)

Total records by month

% of records within its species group

10km squares with records

The latest images and records displayed below include those awaiting verification checks so we cannot guarantee that every identification is correct. Once accepted, the record displays a green tick.

In the Latest Records section, click on the header to sort A-Z, and again to sort Z-A. Use the header boxes to filter the list.

Latest images

Latest records