Hydrilla is an aquatic plant, native to cool to warm waters of Asia, Europe, Africa and Australia.
Plants may be monecious or dioecious and can reproduce vegetatively by fragmentation and by tubers and turions (overwintering buds).
Hydrilla verticillata became an aquatic weed in the United States in the 1960's following release from aquariums into Florida's waterways. As an invasive species, by the 1990s hydrilla was well-established in the southern states where control and management costs millions of dollars each year. Infestations of Hydrilla verticillata have also been detected in California and Washington. Hydrilla has been spotted as far North as Maryland and Delaware.
Hydrilla can be controlled by the application of aquatic herbicides and it is also preferred by grass carp. Tubers pose a problem to control as they can lay dormant for a number of years. In 2006 Bishop-Taylor found that Hydrilla has a high resistance to salinty (>9-10ppt) compared to many other freshwater associated aquatic plants. This has made it even more difficult to remove from waterways and estuaries.
Hydrilla is cumbersome for fishermen, swimmers, and watersports. The economic impact on recreational areas is estimated to be in the millions of dollars.
Hydrilla verticillata closely resembles two aquatic plants: Brazilian elodea (Egeria densa) and native American waterweed (Elodea canadensis).
Also called Esthwaite Waterweed because of its former occurrence in Esthwaite Water in England.
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"Hydrilla".
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