Nymphaea lotus var. thermalis is a variety of Nymphaea lotus native to Romania.
Nymphaea lotus var. thermalis is an aquatic, perennial, rhizomatous plant. The glabrous, or pubescent, sagittate, ovate, or circular leaves have a dentate margin. The adaxial leaf surface is dark green, and the abaxial leaf surface with prominent ribs is more pale and does not have spotting.
The nocturnal, fragrant, white to pink, 12âÂÂ15 cm wide flowers extend 10âÂÂ12 cm over the water surface. The flowers have four sepals, 19âÂÂ20 white petals along with yellow anthers and stamens. The androecium consists of 65âÂÂ80 stamens. The gynoecium consists of 24âÂÂ36 carpels. The fleshy, green to brown fruit bears very numerous seeds. The grey, ellipsoid, glabrous seeds with 8âÂÂ14 ribs are 1.5âÂÂ1.8 mm long, and 1.1âÂÂ1.3 mm wide.
It was first described as Nymphaea thermalis by Augustin Pyramus de Candolle in 1821. Later, it was reduced from the species status to the variety Nymphaea lotus var. thermalis in 1907. In the following year another name, Castalia thermalis , was published. The accepted name is Nymphaea lotus var. thermalis . It is placed in the subgenus Nymphaea subg. Lotos.
Some sources believe it is a relict, which had survived the ice age due to warm water from the thermal spring in Romania. DNA analyses came to the conclusion, that Nymphaea lotus var. thermalis is not distinct from Nymphaea lotus and cannot be a relict population. It was primarily separated for geographical reasons. It has been described as hardly distinct. It is said to differ in having glabrous leaves, yet other sources state there is no difference in the leaf pubescence. The issue of the leaf pubescence was deemed irrelevant, when it was discovered that both glabrous and pubescent leaves are present in individuals of Nymphaea lotus and Nymphaea lotus var. thermalis. It has also been claimed that it differs in the dentation of the leaf margin, but other authors have denied these claims. Likewise, it was refuted that Nymphaea lotus were not heterophyllous, which was claimed to be a distinguishing characteristic. Furthermore, it was claimed that Nymphaea lotus var. thermalis flowers earlier than Nymphaea lotus. The petioles, peduncles, and calyx is said to be glabrous in Nymphaea lotus var. thermalis, supposedly unlike those of Nymphaea lotus. Nymphaea lotus var. thermalis is treated as a synonym of Nymphaea lotus by some sources, however it is still accepted by others.
Nymphaea lotus var. thermalis is endemic to the thermal water of the Peà £a River, Sânmartin, Bihor County, Romania. The area is protected as a nature reserve (51.0 hectares (126 acres) in size) and consists of a rivulet along with three ponds. The water has a roughly constant temperature of around 30 ðC whilst the site has an average air temperature of 10âÂÂ11 ðC. The thermal waters have been recorded as early as 1211, but it was only in 1799 that the first record of N. lotus was made, by Pál Kitaibel. Janos Tuzson proposed in 1907 that this population's unusual location could be explained by the persistent heat provided by the thermal springs could have sustained the population at a pre-ice age time when the plant would have been spreading across the warmer regions of Europe; this theory was corroborated by additional evidence provided by the identification of other endemic species.
Alexandru Borza was the Government minister in charge of education (and also a botanist) who made the first push for legal protection and recognition of Nymphaea lotus var. thermalis â in 1932, the Cabinet of Romania declared the rivulet a nature reserve and the plant a "national monument". Conservation action with the intent to preserve this population has been undertaken for many years (since at least 1940) â including the management of invasive species â and the plant has been included in recent water management legislation. Whilst not held in any Romanian botanical gardens, Nymphaea lotus var. thermalis is grown at Royal Botanic Gardens Kew and at the botanic garden of Bonn University. It is in imminent danger of extinction.