Aquatic plants are either aquatic macrophytes or aquatic microphytes. Aquatic macrophytes are hydrophytes that are large enough to be seen with the naked eye. Aquatic microphytes are hydrophytes that cannot be seen with the naked eye; they are microscopic. • Emergent • Submerged • Rooted: rooted to the substrate • Unrooted: free-floating in the water column • Floating-leaved • Free-floating
Emergent • An
emergent plant is one which grows in water but pierces the surface so that it is partially exposed to air. Collectively, such plants are
emergent vegetation. • This habit may have developed because the leaves can
photosynthesize more efficiently in air and competition from submerged plants but often, the main aerial feature is the flower and the related reproductive process. The emergent habit permits pollination by wind or by flying
insects. • There are many species of emergent plants, among them, the reed (
Phragmites),
Cyperus papyrus,
Typha species,
flowering rush and
wild rice species. Some species, such as
purple loosestrife, may grow in water as emergent plants but they are capable of flourishing in fens or simply in damp ground.
Submergent • Submerged macrophytes completely grow under water with roots attached to the substrate (rooted submerged) (e.g.
Myriophyllum spicatum) or without any root system (unrooted submerged) (e.g.
Ceratophyllum demersum). They can also grow up to the water's surface.
Helophytes are plants that grow partly submerged in
marshes and regrow from
buds below the water surface. Fringing stands of tall vegetation by water basins and rivers may include helophytes. Examples include stands of
Equisetum fluviatile,
Glyceria maxima,
Hippuris vulgaris,
Sagittaria,
Carex,
Schoenoplectus,
Sparganium,
Acorus, yellow flag (
Iris pseudacorus),
Typha and
Phragmites australis. Instead, seaweeds have
holdfasts that only serve as anchors and have no absorptive functions.
Floating-leaved • Floating-leaved macrophytes have root systems attached to the substrate or bottom of the body of water and with leaves that float on the water surface. Common floating leaved macrophytes are water lilies (family
Nymphaeaceae), pondweeds (family
Potamogetonaceae).
Free-floating • floating freely on the water's surface. • Free-floating macrophytes are found suspended on water surface with their root not attached to the substrate,
sediment, or bottom of the water body. They may be easily blown by air and some may provide breeding ground for mosquitoes. Examples include
Lemna spp or
Pistia spp. the latter commonly called water lettuce, water cabbage or Nile cabbage. •
Periphyton - a microphyte that lives and grows on the surface of rooted aquatic plants. •
Benthic algae - relatively immobile algae that inhabit the submerged substrate surface of freshwater on mud, stones, or other relatively stable material. Algae may be single celled such as
Diatoms or
Desmids, or multi-celled such as
Spirogyra or
Cladophora. A few such as some of the diatoms have limited abilities to move over their substrate.
Additional morphological classifications The many possible classifications of aquatic plants are based upon morphology. •
Amphiphytes: plants that are adapted to live either submerged or on land •
Elodeids: stem plants that complete their entire lifecycle submerged, or with only their flowers above the waterline •
Isoetids: rosette plants that complete their entire lifecycle submerged •
Helophytes: plants rooted in the bottom, but with leaves above the waterline •
Nymphaeids: plants rooted in the bottom, but with leaves floating on the water surface •
Neuston: vascular plants that float freely in the water == Aquatic adaptations ==