Looks like Ludwigia Grandulosa.
Looks like Ludwigia Grandulosa.
Thqnks Xiaozhuang.
How about this plant?
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Can help id this also?
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The second pic is Alternanthera ficoidea and the third pic is Hemigraphis repanda. Both of which are non-aquatic....
I am curious as to whether they can survive submerged? I bought them submerged in a lfs and they are sprouting water root as you can see from the pics
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My althernanthera sessilis started melting after a week so was quickly removed hahah
Sorry, noob here. Can someone help me understand why non-aquatic plants can stay submerge for months without drowning? Plants like cut flowers and dracenas commonly developed roots at the cut stem, but these are usually only bottom submerge to allow respiration by the leaves. How is it that alternathera sessilis looking like an aquatic plant but not an aquatic plant, and can still be soaked in water for months before dying?
Many aquatic plants are marginal plants, many of which grow in places that are periodically flooded. Some have adapted to grow submerged, others merely adapted to wait out the flood. Plants do store food in their tissue, others may go dormant.
Help identify this please?
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looks like echinodorus reni
How about this? Is it a rotala macendra mini?
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It look like ludwigia repens.
Xiao zhuang, broken link to picture. Can repost?
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It's not broken, just high resolution, so may need to view on PC. Or try viewing the link directly
http://www.plantedtank.net/forums/pH...Optimizedb.jpg
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