Cat-Tail

( lat. Typha )

Kingdom: Plantae
Order: Typhales
Family: Typhaceae
Genus: Typha

Plant Allergy Overview

Allergenicity

Mild

Asthma Season

Summer

Type

Grass

Sub-Type

Perennial

Allergy Information

Cattails shed a great deal of pollen, and may be allergenic to some people. However, exposure is not typically great enough to be a significant source of allergy to the general public.


Genus Details

Cattails are about 6.6 feet high, with a round stem and long flat leaves. They are well known by their unisexual flowers borne above the leaves. The male flowers (sources of pollen) are located above the female flowers in long, dense, brown structures with a "fuzzy" appearance. The family only contains the genus Typha and the plants are commonly found growing in shallow freshwater areas.


Asthma Description

Cattail pollen grains are either single (Typha angustifolia) or united in tetrads (Typha latifolia). The grains are 1-porate and the pores are generally circular. The exine is reticulate.

Single grains are 20-26 micrometers and pollen grains in tetrads are 40-50 micrometers.


Genus Distribution

The shaded areas on the map indicates where the genus has been observed in the United States.

- Native, observed in a county 
- Introduced, observed in a county 
- Rarely observed


Species in Plantain Genus

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