Aquatic Plants Peer Review Journals

Aquatic plants lack peculiar adaptations for breathing submerged in water, or at the water's surface. Aquatic plants have acquaint to survive in either freshwater or saltwater. Aquatic vascular plants have emanated on multiple occasions in different plant families; they can be ferns or angiosperms (including both monocots and dicots). The only angiosperms accomplished of growing effectively submerged in seawater are the seagrasses. Aquatic plants are phylogenetically well dispersed across the angiosperms, with at least 50 independent origins, although they comprise less than 2% of the angiosperm species. Aquatic plants have DBLs (diffusive boundary layers) that diversify based on the leaves' thickness and density. DBLs are the main element culpable for the paucity of carbon fixation in aquatic plants. In floating aquatic plants, the leaves have unfold to only have stomata on the top materialize due to their non-submerged state.    

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