Although the family Acoraceae was originally described in 1820, since then
Acorus has traditionally been included in Araceae in most classification systems, as in the
Cronquist system. The family has recently been resurrected as molecular systematic studies have shown that
Acorus is not closely related to Araceae or any other
monocot family, leading plant systematists to place the genus and family in its own order. This placement currently lacks support from traditional plant morphology studies, and some taxonomists still place it as a subfamily of Araceae, in the order
Alismatales. The
APG III system recognizes order Acorales, distinct from the Alismatales, and as the
sister group to all other monocots. This relationship is confirmed by more recent phylogenetic studies. Treatment in the
APG IV system is unchanged from APG III.
Species In older literature and on many websites, there is still much confusion, with the name
Acorus calamus equally but wrongly applied to
Acorus americanus (formerly
Acorus calamus var.
americanus). The Kew Checklist accepts 4 species within the genus Acorus: •
Acorus calamus L. – common sweet flag; sterile triploid (3
n = 36); probably of cultivated origin. It is native to
Irtysh River valley,
Kazakhstan but has been widely cultivated and naturalised elsewhere including
Europe, eastern North America, temperate
India and the
Himalayas and southern
Asia. •
Acorus americanus Raf. - Canada, northern United States, Siberia to Inner Mongolia. •
Acorus gramineus Sol. ex
Aiton – Japanese sweet flag or grassy-leaved sweet flag; fertile diploid (2
n = 18); - China, Himalayas, Japan, Korea, Indochina, Philippines, Primorye. •
Acorus verus Raf. - Native to central Asia to Russian Far East and Japan. Introduced to India and
South-East Asia.
Acorus from Kazakhstan, Europe,
China and Japan have been planted in the
United States.
Etymology The name 'acorus' is derived from the Greek word 'acoron', a name used by
Dioscorides, which in turn was derived from 'coreon', meaning 'pupil', because it was used in
herbal medicine as a treatment for
inflammation of the
eye. == Distribution and habitat ==