An underwater flowering plant which, like land plants, has leaves, stems, and a root system.
Marine flowering plant that grows submersed in seawater
A salt marsh grass that is grown in paddy-like fields and flooded with sea water during the crop cycle. The hard, almost inpenetrable seagrass is spun into tough strands which resist most stains and dirt. Material is anti-static and provides a low dust and allergy-free environment. Seagrass rugs have excellent durability, are non-toxic and colorfast and create healthy indoor humidity levels. These rugs are intended for indoor use only.
a flowering plant, complete with leaves, a rhizome (an underground, usually horizontally-oriented stem) and a root system
rooted, vascular, flowering plants that, except for some flowering structures, live and grow below the water surface in coastal and estuarine waters in large meadows or small disjunct beds.
Marine flowering plants which generally attach to the substrate with roots.
intertidal and subtidal flowering plants found mainly in shallow waters of protected coastal waters
Members of either the Hydrocharitaceae or Zosteraceae families - of bottom growing grass-like spermatophytes, usually found in waters less than 10 m deep, and important in stabilizing unconsolidated bottoms.
any of various seaweeds that grow underwater in shallow beds
Rooted, submerged marine or estuarine macrophytes of several species. Habitats created by seagrass meadows are among the most diverse and productive estuarine environments. Loss of seagrass has become a marine conservation issue Gulf?wide.
Sea grass (or sea-grass in British English) are flowering plants from four plant families (Posidoniaceae, Zosteraceae, Hydrocharitaceae and Cymodoceaceae) that grow in the marine saline environment.