Vascular Plants of North Carolina
Account for Swamp Dock - Rumex verticillatus   L.
Members of Polygonaceae:
Members of Rumex with account distribution info or public map:
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Section 6 » Order Polygonales » Family Polygonaceae
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AuthorL.
DistributionMostly Outer Banks and outer Coastal Plain; scattered records in the lower and central Piedmont, west to Stokes and Davidson counties. A collection from far western Cherokee County may be an introduction.

Que. and MA to MN and SD, south to southern FL and TX.
AbundanceFairly common to common in the lower Coastal Plain, including coastal islands; close to tidal waters. Away from tidal waters, generally uncommon and quite local, spotty in occurrence west to the central Piedmont.
HabitatMargins of fresh-tidal rivers, tidal swamp forests, fresh and fresh-tidal marshes, interdune marshes and ponds; old oxbows and brownwater river meanders (Piedmont); openings in swamp forests. This is a strong wetland species, typically in rather undisturbed habitats (for a Rumex).
PhenologyFlowering and fruiting April-July.
IdentificationSwamp Dock is robust and typically grows 2-4 feet tall, with lance-shaped leaves to at least 6 inches long. The terminal inflorescence has strongly ascending branches, along which the numerous flowers are grouped in whorls of 10-15. The fruits are small and winged, light yellow green in color. Each flower stalk is 10-15 mm long, vs. 3-8 mm in the very similar Pale Dock (R. altissimus). This distinction can easily be seen without a hand lens; Swamp Dock has drooping or dangling flowers and fruits (as the pedicels are much longer than the flowers and fruits), whereas those in Pale Dock are essentially sessile and appear tight to the branches. In our tidal fresh marshes, this can be a conspicuous plant, with its strap-like leaves and steeple-shaped inflorescence, standing apart from the dominant grasses, sedges, and rushes with their linear leaves.
Taxonomic CommentsNone, though Weakley (2018) and a few other references have -- controversially -- pulled R. floridanus from this species.

Other Common Name(s)Water Dock
State RankS4
Global RankG5
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B.A. SorrieDare mainland, Alligator River NWR, Lake Worth Road, June 2012. DarePhoto_natural
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