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Phragmites is a genus of plants known as reeds. Pondweeds are a family of aquatic plant with a subcosmopolitan distribution. Sagittaria is a genus of plants known as arrowhead or katniss. Salix, the willows, are native to many areas throughout the world, usually in riparian ecosystems.
Lemnoideae is a subfamily of flowering aquatic plants, known as duckweeds, water lentils, or water lenses.They float on or just beneath the surface of still or slow-moving bodies of fresh water and wetlands.
Symplocarpus foetidus, commonly known as skunk cabbage [5] or eastern skunk cabbage (also swamp cabbage, clumpfoot cabbage, or meadow cabbage, foetid pothos or polecat weed), is a low-growing plant that grows in wetlands and moist hill slopes of eastern North America.
The plants often grow together in crowded colonies and spread by runners at or just under the soil surface. In late summer the plants produce tubers that are twice as long as wide, [9] each typically measuring 0.5 to 5 cm (1 ⁄ 4 to 2 in) in diameter. [8] The plant produces rosettes of leaves and an inflorescence on a long rigid scape.
Reed is a common name for several tall, grass-like plants of wetlands. Varieties. They are all members of the order Poales (in the modern, ...
Carya aquatica, the bitter pecan or water hickory, is a large tree, that can grow over 30 metres (98 ft) tall of the Juglandaceae or walnut family. In the American South it is a dominant plant species found on clay flats and backwater areas near streams and rivers.
Typha latifolia is a perennial herbaceous wetland plant in the genus Typha.It is known in English as bulrush [4] [5] (sometimes as common bulrush [6] to distinguish from other species of Typha), and in American as broadleaf cattail. [7]
Peltandra virginica is a plant of the arum family known as green arrow arum [3] and tuckahoe. [4] It is widely distributed in wetlands in the eastern United States, as well as in Quebec, Ontario, and Cuba. [2] [5] [6] It is common in central Florida including the Everglades [7] and along the Gulf Coast. [8]