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|taxo_author=L.
 
|taxo_author=L.
 
|common_name=Common Sweet Flag
 
|common_name=Common Sweet Flag
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|poisonous=parts may be toxic
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|poison_ref=Plants for a Future
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|lifespan=perennial
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|exposure=sun
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|water=wet
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|features=edible, foliage
 
|Temp Metric=°F
 
|Temp Metric=°F
 
|min_zone=3
 
|min_zone=3
 
|usda_ref=Plants for a future
 
|usda_ref=Plants for a future
|jumpin=If this plant info box on watering; zones; height; etc. is mostly empty you can click on the edit tab and fill in the blanks!
   
|image=Acorus calamus1.jpg
 
|image=Acorus calamus1.jpg
 
|image_width=200
 
|image_width=200
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'''''Acorus calamus''''', commonly known as '''sweet flag''' or '''calamus''' and various [[Juncaceae|rushes]] and [[sedge]]s,<ref>Other names include cinnamon sedge, flagroot, gladdon, myrtle flag, myrtle grass, myrtle sedge, sweet cane, sweet myrtle, sweet root, sweet rush, and sweet sedge</ref> is a [[plant]] from the [[Acoraceae]] family, in the genus ''[[Acorus]]''.  It is a tall [[perennial plant|perennial]] [[wetland]] [[monocot]] with [[scent]]ed leaves and more strongly scented [[rhizome]]s, which have been used medicinally, for its odor, and as a [[Psychoactive drug|psychotropic drug]]. Probably indigenous to [[India]], ''Acorus calamus'' is now found across Europe, much of Asia, Australia, and southern Canada/Northern USA, where it may be mistaken for the native ''[[Acorus americanus]]''.
 
'''''Acorus calamus''''', commonly known as '''sweet flag''' or '''calamus''' and various [[Juncaceae|rushes]] and [[sedge]]s,<ref>Other names include cinnamon sedge, flagroot, gladdon, myrtle flag, myrtle grass, myrtle sedge, sweet cane, sweet myrtle, sweet root, sweet rush, and sweet sedge</ref> is a [[plant]] from the [[Acoraceae]] family, in the genus ''[[Acorus]]''.  It is a tall [[perennial plant|perennial]] [[wetland]] [[monocot]] with [[scent]]ed leaves and more strongly scented [[rhizome]]s, which have been used medicinally, for its odor, and as a [[Psychoactive drug|psychotropic drug]]. Probably indigenous to [[India]], ''Acorus calamus'' is now found across Europe, much of Asia, Australia, and southern Canada/Northern USA, where it may be mistaken for the native ''[[Acorus americanus]]''.
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The leaves are between 0.7 and 1.7&nbsp;cm wide, with average of 1&nbsp;cm. The sympodial leaf of ''Acorus calamus'' is somewhat shorter than the vegetative leaves. The margin is curly-edged or undulate. The [[spadix]], at the time of expansion, can reach a length between 4.9 and 8.9&nbsp;cm (longer than ''A. americanus''). The flowers are longer too, between 3 and 4&nbsp;mm. ''Acorus calamus'' is infertile and shows an abortive [[ovary (plants)|ovary]] with a shriveled appearance.
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The leaves are between 0.7 and 1.7 cm wide, with average of 1 cm. The sympodial leaf of ''Acorus calamus'' is somewhat shorter than the vegetative leaves. The margin is curly-edged or undulate. The [[spadix]], at the time of expansion, can reach a length between 4.9 and 8.9 cm (longer than ''A. americanus''). The flowers are longer too, between 3 and 4 mm. ''Acorus calamus'' is infertile and shows an abortive [[ovary (plants)|ovary]] with a shriveled appearance.
    
{{Inc|
 
{{Inc|

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