Hairlike pondweed is an aquatic perennial that dies back each winter into a large number of asexually produced resting bodies called
turions. There are no rhizomes. It produces slender, cylindrical or slightly compressed, branching stems usually less than a metre in length but occasionally up to 2 m. The submerged leaves are long and very narrow, typically 16–80 mm long and 0.3–1 mm wide, with the midrib occupying up to 70% of the width of the leaf near the base. They are rigid and green turning darker with age. There are no floating leaves. The
inflorescence is a short spike of 3–5 flowers arising from the water on a slender
peduncle. This species readily
hybridizes with several other species of
Potamogeton including
P. berchtoldii (
P. ×
franconicus G.Fisch.),
P. pusillus (
P. ×
grovesii Dandy & G.Taylor) and
P. compressus (
P. ×
ripoides Baagøe). Hairlike pondweed is diploid, with 2n=26
chromosomes. Hairlike pondweed is one of the more distinctive fine-leaved pondweeds due to the characteristically stiff leaves dominated by the midrib and open but tightly rolled stipules. However, it tends to be rarer than other fine-leaved species and often grows in mixed beds with other fine-leaved water plants such as
P. pusillus and
Zannichellia palustris, so it may be overlooked. ==Taxonomy==