Posidonia oceanica has roots (which mainly serve to anchor the plant to the substrate), rhizomes, and tapeform leaves. The rhizomes, up to thick, grow both horizontally (plagiotropic rhizomes), and vertically (orthotropic rhizomes). The former, due to the presence at the bottom of lignited roots up to long, anchor the plant to the substrate. The latter, which increase height, have the function of combatting sanding due to continuous sedimentation. The two types of growth give rise to the so-called "kill", a terrace formation that consists of a network of strata of rhizomes, roots, and trapped sediments. In this way, posidonias colonise an environment that algae could hardly occupy due to the lack of roots. The leaves arise from orthotropic rhizomes and are cyntiform and bright green in colour that turns brown over time. They can reach a length around . On average, they have a width of and have 13 to 17 parallel ribs. The apexes are rounded and are often lost by the action of waves and currents. They are organised in bushes of six or seven leaves, with the oldest on the outside and the youngest on the inside. The leaves are divided into three categories: • Adult leaves have a lamina with photosynthetic function and a base separated from the foliar edge by a concave structure called "ligula". • Intermediate leaves have no basis. • Young leaves normally have a length less than 50 mm. In autumn, the plant loses the outermost adult leaves, which become brown and are photosynthetically inactive. During the winter, new leaves are produced.
Reproduction Posidonia oceanica reproduces both sexually and asexually (by
stolons). Sexual reproduction occurs through the production of flowers and fruits. The flowers are hermaphroditic and are grouped in a herringbone-shaped inflorescence, green in colour, and contained between floral bracts. The peduncle binds to the rhizome in the centre of the bunch. The gynaecium is formed by a unilocular ovary that continues with a style and ends in the stigma. The androecium consists of three stamens with short anthers. Flowering depends on environmental factors (light and temperature) and endogenous factors (age and size of the plant) and takes place in September and October in the meadows closest to the sea surface, while in the deepest ones, it is delayed for two months. Pollen inside the anthers is spherical in shape, but becomes filamentous as soon as it is released into the water. No recognition mechanisms exist between pollen and stigmata that prevent self-fertilisation. Pollination is hydrophilic and can lead to fruit formation, although some of them do not reach maturation, which occurs after six months. Once ripe, the fruits separate and float on the surface. The fruit, slightly fleshy and called in some places "sea olive", is similar to a drupe and has a porous pericarp and rich in an oily substance that allows flotation. When it rots, it releases a seed (coated by a thin membrane, but without a true and proper tegument), which falls to the bottom, and with the right conditions of depth, stability, and type of sediment, germinates and gives rise to a new plant. Experimental work has shown that wave exposure can affect the establishment of
P. oceanica seedlings, indicating that hydrodynamic conditions are important during early life stages. Germination begins with the release of a small, white root of radical pole and a leaf of the apical pole. With sexual reproduction, the plant colonises new areas, diffuses meadows in other areas and guarantees genetic variability. Seedling establishment can be affected by substrate type and hydrodynamic exposure, which influence anchorage and early survival. Asexual reproduction by stolons, which allows the expansion of meadows, is carried out through plagiargiotropic rhizomes, which grow about and colonise new spaces. The high accumulation of sediments and the reduction of the space available for horizontal growth stimulates the vertical growth of the rhizomes, thus forming the bushes.
Growth Posidonia growth rate is amongst the lowest of marine angiosperms, with its horizontal rhizomes growing from , whilst the vertical rhizomes grow from . Growing a new leaf takes about 51 days, exceptionally longer than other types of seagrasses, such as
Zostera noltii, which takes roughly 14 days. ==Taxonomy==