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Hydrilla
Family: Hydrocharitaceae;
Genus: Hydrilla;
Species: verticillata;
Synonyms:
Growth Form: Forb
General:
Aquatic, herbaceous, submersed, perennial rooted in saturated soil, can grow in water a few inches deep to 20 feet deep.
Flowers:
Male and female: female flowers solitary, tiny, white, floating from stalk on water surface; male flowers tiny, greenish, attached to stems, until they break loose, rise to the surface and free-float.
Fruits and Seeds:
Reproduces mainly by regrowth of stem fragments, but also by buds at leaf nodes (turions, dark green, 1/4 inch round) and from 1/2 inch x 1/2 inch potato-like tubers (roots) below ground.
Leaves:
Green, 0.6 inches long, pointed tips, arranged in whorls of 3 to 10 joined directly to stem; whorls in long increments, 1/8 to 2 inches apart on stem. Leaf edges distinctly saw-toothed; plant noticeably rough when pulled through the hand.
Stems or Branches:
Submersed, slender and branching profusely across the water surface; up to 25 ft long. White roots grow from stem (adventitious roots).
Threatens:
Threatens any freshwater aquatic communities including springs, lakes, marshes, ditches, streams and rivers.
Look-Alikes:
Common Waterweed, Elodea canadensis; leaves occur in whorls of 3 around the stem (or opposite), without tubers. Non-native, Brazilian Waterweed, Egeria densa; leaves in whorls of 4 - 6 (8), bushier in appearance, without tubers.
Distribution:
Native to S. India and Korea. Known from Florida to Connecticut and west to California and Washington. Isolated populations found in Indiana (2007) and Wisconsin.
Other Links:
http://plants.ifas.ufl.edu/seagrant/hydver2.html http://www.invasivespeciesinfo.gov/aquatics/hydrilla.shtml http://nas.er.usgs.gov/taxgroup/plants/docs/hy_verti.html http://www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/wq/plants/weeds/aqua001.html
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 Tubers Tim Murphy, The University of Georgia
 Plant Nancy Tessmer
 Lake invaded by Hydrilla Gregory A. Sevener, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
 Plant Sally Abella, King County Department of Natural Resources
 Plant close-up Vic Ramey, University of Florida/IFAS Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants. Used with permission.
 Lake invaded by Hydrilla Amy Murray, University of Florida/IFAS Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants. Used with permission.
 Hydrilla on boat motor Allison Fox, University of Florida/IFAS Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants.Used with permission.
 Plant and roots Vic Ramey, University of Florida/IFAS Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants. Used with permission.
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