Colorado Wild Plants and Fungi
by DaySounds © 2013-16




Narrowleaf Cattails (Typha angustifolia )

The entire plant is edible and highly nutritive: roots, young shoots, stems, leaves, female
and male spikes (these latter ones could be grounded to powder and used as flour).
Its leaves are longer than its spike stems, and there is a space between the female and
male spikes.

All Colorado cattails are edible. Two other species, which easily hybridize, with this one
and each-other are:
--Southern cattails (Typha domingensis), whose leaves are as long as their spike stems;
they have a space between male and female spikes; and these latter ones are light brown.
--Broadleaf cattails (Typha latifolia ), whose female and male spikes usually don't have
any space between them; oftentimes, the female spikes are much broader than the ones
producing and bearing the pollen; as the name indicates, the leaves are usually broader
than the other species.

Male spikes drop off from the stem little by little after having released the pollen.
                                     

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