USDA
Code: MYSP2
Legal
Status:
Colorado
List B Noxious Weed
Family:
Halorgaceae (Water Milfoil)
Lifecycle:
Submersed perennial
Growth form: herb
Flower: Tiny
pink, usually flower in mid to late July.
Seeds/Fruit:
Many seeds produced, not a factor in reproduction.
Leaves: Leaves
are divided into leaflets that are threadlike, usually in
more than 14 pairs.
Stems: Long
underwater stems that are branched which produce leaves near
the surface of the water.
Roots:
Plants die back to root crowns in fall, sprouting in
spring.
Seedling:
Rare, never observed occurring naturally.
Colonization:
New colonies are usually a result of
fragmentation.
The plant can auto-fragment, producing roots before
separation. Activities
such as boating and natural processes such as wind and wave
action can also cause fragmentation.
Each fragment can become a new plant.
SIMILAR SPECIES:
Natives:
Native milfoil
IMPACTS
Agricultural:
Dense
mats clog waterways.
Ecological:
Growth of the thick vegetative mats degrade water
quality and reduce dissolved oxygen levels.
Dense mats can restrict recreation and can foul
beaches when the mats begin to decay.
HABITAT
AND DISTRIBUTION
General
requirements: Lakes, ponds, shallow reservoirs and low
energy areas of rivers and streams.
Distribution:
Confirmed in 45 states and in
Canada
.
Historical:
Native range was Europe, Asia, and northern
Africa
.
First documented in the
US
in 1942, thought to have been intentionally introduced.
REFERENCES
Couch, R., and E. Nelson. 1985. Myriophyllum spicatum in
North America
. Pp. 8-18 in L.W.J. Anderson (ed.). First International
Symposium Watermilfoil and Related Haloragaceae Species.
23-24 July 1985,
Vancouver
, B.C. Aquatic Plant Management Society,
Vicksburg
,
MS
.
Madsen, J.D., J.W. Sutherland, J.A. Bloomfield, L.W. Eichler,
and C.W. Boylen. 1991. The decline of native vegetation
under dense Eurasian watermilfoil canopies. J. Aquatic Plant
Management 29:94-99.
Nichols, S. A. 1975. Identification and management of
Eurasian Water Milfoil in
Wisconsin
. Wisconsin
Academy
of
Sciences
, Arts and Letters 63:116-126.
Nichols, S. A. 1994. Evaluation of invasions and declines of
submersed macrophytes for the Upper Great Lakes Region.
Lake
and Reservoir Management 10(1):29-33.
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