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Aquatic plants.

Bowles AMC

Aquatic Plants

The pond, marsh, or stream near your favorite walking trail depends on aquatic plants to stay clear, oxygenated, and alive with fish and frogs — and understanding how these plants evolved helps us protect and restore those water-edge ecosystems.

Many completely unrelated plant families independently figured out how to live underwater or at the water's edge — think water lilies, seagrasses, and mangroves. Scientists are looking at their bodies, fossils, and genes to understand how plants traded in their land-living toolkit for aquatic life. These water plants are quietly doing enormous work: cleaning water, making oxygen, and sheltering wildlife.

Key Findings

1

Multiple unrelated plant groups evolved aquatic lifestyles independently, making this a striking example of convergent evolution.

2

Aquatic plants perform critical ecosystem services including oxygen production, water quality maintenance, and biodiversity support in lakes, rivers, and wetlands.

3

Coastal plant communities such as mangrove forests and seagrass meadows represent distinct aquatic plant ecosystems with outsized ecological importance.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Aquatic plants evolved independently across many plant lineages to thrive in lakes, rivers, wetlands, and coastlines. Scientists are studying their unique adaptations to understand how land plants repeatedly reinvented themselves for life in water.

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Abstract Preview

Multiple plant groups that thrive in aquatic habitats have evolved independently. These plants are integral to lake, river, and wetland ecosystems where they produce oxygen, maintain water quality ...

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Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 12 other discoveries — Mangroves, Seagrass aquatic-plants, convergent-evolution, wetland-ecology +2 more 5 related articles

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