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  2. Thalassia testudinum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thalassia_testudinum

    Turtle grass can also sexually reproduce through the production of underwater flowers and hydrophily. Turtle grass is dioecious, which means that there are separate male and female plants, each which produce an imperfect flower containing only one sex. Sexual reproduction takes place from April to July depending on location, though flowering ...

  3. Seagrass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seagrass

    Monocots are grass and grass-like flowering plants (angiosperms), the seeds of which typically contain only one embryonic leaf or cotyledon. [12] Terrestrial plants evolved perhaps as early as 450 million years ago from a group of green algae. [13] Seagrasses then evolved from terrestrial plants which migrated back into the ocean.

  4. Seagrass meadow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seagrass_meadow

    Seagrasses are terrestrial plants that transitioned to the marine environment. They are the only flowering plants that live in the ocean. Seagrasses are flowering plants (angiosperms) which grow in marine environments. They evolved from terrestrial plants which migrated back into the ocean about 75 to 100 million years ago.

  5. Oceanic physical-biological process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oceanic_physical...

    Water forms the ocean, produces the high density fluid environment and greatly affects the oceanic organisms. Sea water produces buoyancy and provides support for plants and animals. That's the reason why in the ocean organisms can be that huge like the blue whale and macrophytes. And the densities or rigidities of the oceanic organisms are ...

  6. Syringodium filiforme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syringodium_filiforme

    Syringodium filiforme, commonly known as manatee grass, is a species of marine seagrass. It forms meadows in shallow sandy or muddy locations in the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico, and is also found in the Bahamas and Bermuda. [1] [2] It occurs to a depth of about 20 m (66 ft), and even deeper where water is very clear. [1]

  7. Posidonia oceanica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posidonia_oceanica

    The characteristics of the Posidonia plant, its growth dynamics and the large amount of biomass produced, are factors that can sustain very diverse plant and animal communities. Distinguished are: epiphytic communities (that is, bacteria, algae and bryozoa that colonise the surface of the leaves and rhizomes of the plant), vagile and sessile ...

  8. Zostera marina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zostera_marina

    Zostera marina is a flowering vascular plant species as one of many kinds of seagrass, with this species known primarily by the English name of eelgrass with seawrack much less used, and refers to the plant after breaking loose from the submerged wetland soil, and drifting free with ocean current and waves to a coast seashore.

  9. Ruppia maritima - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruppia_maritima

    Ruppia maritima is an aquatic plant species commonly known as beaked tasselweed, beaked ditchgrass, [citation needed] ditch grass, tassel pondweed and widgeon grass. [2] Despite its scientific name , it is not a marine plant ; is perhaps best described as a salt-tolerant freshwater species. [ 3 ]