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Cattail-Click for more info
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Cattails
have flat to slightly rounded leaves that twist slightly over their
length and can grow to 5 or 10 feet in height. Flowers form a dense
dark brown, cigar-shape at the end of spikes (called the catkin).
Cattails can be partially submerged or in boggy areas with no
permanently standing water. Cattails spread rapidly because their seeds
blow in the wind and float on the water's surface and vegetatively they
spread from underground rhizomes.
Submerged portions of all
aquatic plants provide habitats for many micro and macro invertebrates.
These invertebrates in turn are used as food by fish and other wildlife
species (e.g. ducks). After aquatic plants die, their decomposition by
bacteria and fungi provides food (called "detritus") for many aquatic
invertebrates. The rhizomes and lower leaf portions of cattails are
consumed by nutria, muskrats, and geese.
Texas
Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University
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