About: Elodea is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 392 publications have been published within this topic receiving 9169 citations. The topic is also known as: Water weeds & Water weed.
TL;DR: Nano- and microplastics affect growth of sediment-rooted macrophytes and particle size seems to play an important factor, suggesting no immediate implications for ecological risks.
TL;DR: The macro-invertebrates associated with eight species of emergent, floating-leaved and submerged macrophytes were recorded in May-June 1979; however, some animals were also species-specific, particularly those occurring on the emergent plants.
Abstract: The macro-invertebrates associated with eight species of emergent, floating-leaved and submerged macrophytes were recorded in May-June 1979. The plant species were: Phragmites australis, Sparganium erectum, Typha angustifolia, Polygonum amphibium, Ceratophyllum demersum, Elodea sp., Myriophyllum spicatum and Nitella mucronata.
TL;DR: Differences in the susceptibility of target organisms could be a result of adaptation to the respective host plants and indicate that allelopathic interference might reduce the abundance of some species, especially cyanobacteria, in epiphytic biofilms.
TL;DR: Evidence is presented that normal growth of axillary shoots occurs even when all mineral ions have to be obtained by translocation from the lower compartment.
Abstract: A B S T R A C T Rooted stems of three aquatic species were cultured in a two-compartment apparatus which allowed the upper and lower portions of the stem to be kept in different nutrient solutions. p32 was supplied to either the upper or lower compartment. At the end of a 10-day growth period, the specific activity of phosphate was determined in axillary shoots which developed during the course of the experiment from buds in the upper compartment. The results indicated that most of the phosphate in these shoots was not absorbed from the ambient medium but was derived from the rooted stem base in the lower compartment (over 90 % in Myriophyllum brasiliense, 59 % in M. spicatum, and 74 % in Elodea densa). These results give a very different but probably more accurate picture of phosphate absorption in rooted aquatic vascular plants than short-term experiments, in which phosphate is readily taken up from the ambient medium by leaves of M. spicatum and E. densa. In M. brasiliense the amount of phosphate translocated is related to the mass of roots present. Evidence is presented that normal growth of axillary shoots occurs even when all mineral ions have to be obtained by translocation from the lower compartment.
TL;DR: Maintenance of these species in ecosystems frequently disturbed by floods can partly be explained by their high regeneration abilities, and results are discussed in terms of life-history traits and ecological strategies.