Aquatic plant

Aquatic plants are plants that have adapted to living in aquatic environments (saltwater or freshwater). They are also referred to as hydrophytes or aquatic macrophytes. These plants require special adaptations for living submerged in water, or at the water's surface. Aquatic plants can only grow in water or in soil that is permanently saturated with water. Aquatic vascular plants can be ferns or angiosperms (from a variety of families, including monocots and dicots). Seaweeds are not vascular plants; rather they are multicellular marine algae, and therefore are not typically included among aquatic plants. As opposed to plant types such as mesophytes and xerophytes, hydrophytes do not have a problem retaining water, due to the abundance of water in their environment. This means that aquatic plants have less need to regulate transpiration, which would require more energy and be of little benefit to the plant.

Contents

Freshwater plants

Characteristics

Characteristics of aquatic plants:

For example, some species of buttercup (genus Ranunculus) float slightly submerged in water; only the flowers extend above the water. Their leaves and roots are long and thin and almost hair-like; this helps spread the mass of the plant over a wide area, making it more buoyant. Long roots and thin leaves also provide a greater surface area for uptake of mineral solutes and oxygen.

Wide flat leaves in water lilies (family Nymphaeaceae) help distribute weight over a large area, thus helping them float near surface.

Many fish keepers keep aquatic plants in their tanks to control phytoplankton and moss by removing metabolites.

Many species of aquatic plant are invasive species. Aquatic plants make particularly good weeds because they reproduce vegetatively from fragments.

Adaptations


All floating plants


Duckweed, water cabbage


Water lily


Floating heart, water lily, lotus, yellow pond lily, water-shield


Most partially-submerged ("emersed") plants


Dissected: Parrot's Feather, Hornwort
Thread-like: ditch-grass, quillwort


Hydrilla

Saltwater plants

Several aquatic plants live or are able to survive in brackish, saline, and salt water. Some are also grown commercially at or near shore. These include Salicornia, Aster tripolium, and Crambe maritima.[1][2]

Human nutrition

Many aquatic plants are used by humans as a food source. Note that especially in (South-east) Asia edible but uncooked hydrophytes are implicated in the transmission of fasciolopsiasis.[3] See also Fasciola hepatica.

Animal nutrition

Some examples of aquatic plants

Some examples of aquatic plants

See also

Notes

Source

External links