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Plant life includes common reeds, bulrush and saltgrass.
Plants found closest to the water include cattails, common reeds, sedges, rushes, and horsetails.
Around the salt flats are colonies of saltworts, common reeds (Phragmites australis) and the glasswort (Salicornia fruticosa).
Three of State significance are Plains Sedgey Wetland, Tall Marsh dominated by Common Reeds, and Brackish Aquatic Herbland.
It has vegetation cover consisting of Apple Trees, Pear Trees, Sumac, Beach Roses, Grasses and Common Reeds, together with a large Gull colony.
They also discussed the struggle between invasive phragmites, the all-too-common common reeds that dominate the wetlands, and spartina, also known as smooth cord grass, which provides shelter for fish larvae and energy-rich seed for birds.
In nutrient-rich water, however there are some plants with very competitive strategies, like the reed (Phragmites australis).
Common Reed (Phragmites australis) is among the plant species growing along the edges of the canal.
Where the land is ungrazed, Common Reed (Phragmites australis) ofetn forms a zone above this.
Other plant communities are Muehlenbeckia shrubland, samphire herbland and Phragmites australis reedswamp.
It is associated with marsh-hay cordgrass (Spartina patens) and common reed (Phragmites australis).
Overall, it resembles an outsize common reed (Phragmites australis) or a bamboo (Subfamily Bambusoideae).
Common reed (Phragmites australis) and cattails (Typha spp.)
Wild vegetation such as water reed (Phragmites australis), bulrush/cat tail (Typha spp.)
Sallow is found throughout the swamp area with some areas of open reed bed where Common Reed Phragmites australis is found.
The reedbeds (Phragmites australis), occurring in the two reservoirs and not included in Annex I, could constitute an additional habitat type.
The vegetation along the river is characterised by reeds, mainly the Phragmites australis, and by wetland forest with trees like plane trees, willows and poplars.
Plants include common reed (Phragmites australis), Lesser Indian Reed Mace (Typha angustata) and several species of cane - Schoenoplectus littoralis, Schoenoplectus lacustris and endemic Scirpus kasachstanicus.
Large areas of mangrove and Phragmites australis swamps were destroyed in the lower reaches of the Lake St Lucia system by the floodwaters, and mangrove saplings also died from inundation lasting days to weeks.
There are degraded areas of the marsh in which the common reed (Phragmites australis), an invasive species, has supplanted the native cordgrass; this generally occurs in the high marsh zone where the soil is saturated but infrequently inundated.
Extensive beds of the common reed (Phragmites australis ) are no longer found in these levels except in the Combe Haven valley where the reed bed of some 10 hectares is the largest remaining example of this habitat in Sussex.
The banks of Mare de Zoui are home to dense stands of reeds (Phragmites australis and Typha capensis), along with Scirpoides holoschoenus, Juncus maritimus, Juncus bufonius and Equisetum ramosissimum, while species of pond weed (Potamogeton) grow in the open water.