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  Eichhornia crassipes, Water Hyacinth
Hydrilla
  Lythrum salicaria, Purple Loosestrife
Myriophyllum spicatum, Eurasian Water Milfoil
  Salvinia molesta, Giant Salvinia


Aquatic plants — besides known as hydrophytic plants or even hydrophytic plant — come plants that own adapted to residing inside or even in aquatic environments. Because go or even under a water surface requires many favorite adaptations, aquatic plants may merely develop within fluids or even for good sopping soil. Aquatic vascular plants can be ferns or angiosperms (from each monocot and dicot families). Seaweeds are not vascular plants however multicellular marine algae, and therfore non generally involved in the category, "aquatic plants."

Numbers of fishkeepers & aquarium hobbyists keep aquatic plants in their tanks to oxygenate the a stream for their fish.

Numerous coinage of aquatic plant come invasive species in different parts of the globe. Aquatic plants produce particularly practiced weeds because they reproduce vegetatively from fragments.

Examples: Utricularia (from Latin, utricle, a trifle bag or even bottle) occurs as genus of slender aquatic plants, a leaves of which are then furnished using swimming bladders. It is known as bladderworts.

Human nutrition:
Wild rice (Zizania) Water caltrop (Trapa natans) Chinese water chestnut (Eleocharis dulcis) Indian Lotus (Nelumbo nucifera) Water spinach (Ipomoea aquatica) Watercress (Rorippa nasturtium-aquaticum) Water mimose ? (Neptunia oleracea]]) Taro (Colocasia esculenta) Rice (Oryza) is originally not an aquatic plant.

Animal nutrition:
Water hyacinth (Eichhornia) Duckweed: Lemna, Spirodela und Wolffia

Especially in (South-east) Asia edible Water-plants are suspicious to transmit Fasciolopsiasis by eating them uncooked.[http://www.stanford.edu/class/humbio103/ParaSites2002/fasciolopsiasis/fasciolopsiasis.html] Reference
Cook, C.D.K. (ed). 1974. Water Plants of the World. Dr W Junk Publishers, The Hague. ISBN 9061930243 =

Aquatic Ecosystem Restoration Foundation
AERF supports research for the control of aquatic weed species and exotic plants.

Aquatic Plant Control Operations Support Center
Serves as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers consultant on invasive plant issues and furnishes technical expertise and/or personnel and equipment to respond to localized, short term critical situations caused by excessive growths of aquatic and other invasive plants throughout the U.S.

Prohibited Aquatic, Wetland and Invasive Plants
Lists of Prohibited Aquatic, Wetland and Invasive Plants in Florida.

Invasive Plant Species and Microbial Processes in a Tidal Freshwater Marsh
Study in Hudson Valley, New York. Reprinted from Journal of Environmental Quality, 1999.

San Francisco Estuary Invasive Spartina Project
Campaign to preserve California's coastal biological resources through the elimination of introduced species of Spartina.

Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants
The University of Florida presents a large collection of links sorted into categories designed to be extremely helpful to anyone doing research or just curious about Aquatic, Wetland and Invasive plants.

Aquatic Plant Management Society
This international organization is a respected source of expertise in the field of biological, mechanical, and chemical aquatic plant management and aquatic plant species.

Killer Algae
Caulerpa taxifolia, once a harmless aquarium plant, is carpeting the Mediterranean, choking out all other aquatic plants.

Invasive Weeds
Photographs and illustrations. Includes facts about the ecology, origins, distribution, and management of these plants in the UK.

Working for Water at South African National Parks
Aims to preserve biodiversity and protect water resources by controlling alien invading plants in national parks in South Africa such as Kruger National Park.


Science: Biology: Botany
Science: Biology: Ecology: Aquatic Ecology: Aquatic Organisms
Science: Biology: Ecology: Plant Ecology
Science: Biology: Flora and Fauna: Plantae
Science: Environment: Water Resources: Water Quality
Science: Environment: Water Resources: Wetlands




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