dcsimg

Glyceria maxima86 habit1 (10638695726)

Image of Commelinids

Description:

Description: Introduced, warm-season, perennial, erect, stout grass with stems up to 2.5 m tall arising from rhizomes. A native of Europe, it has been planted in swampy areas as a fodder crop and has naturalised in streams, dams and drains in depths of up to 2 m. It appears to be fairly common on basalt soils of the Ebor - Dorrigo region on the Northern Tablelands of NSW. Palatable, productive, nutritious, provides shelter for waterbirds and can reduce streambank erosion. Also a highly invasive weed in well-aerated wet conditions. It outcompetes other species and forms monocultures, accumulates toxic levels of hydrocyanic acid that can result in stock cyanide poisoning, and causes siltation of streams and dams. Rhizomes comprise around half the plant’s total biomass and are capable of producing large infestations in a short period of time. Its control can lead to large amounts of decaying matter that pollutes water unless the material is removed. Date: 26 March 2013, 13:17. Source: Glyceria maxima86 habit1. Author: Harry Rose from South West Rocks, Australia. Camera location 30° 23′ 48.01″ S, 152° 17′ 25.06″ E : View all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap - Google Earth: -30.396670; 152.290295.

Source Information

license
cc-by-3.0
copyright
Harry Rose
original
original media file
visit source
partner site
Wikimedia Commons
ID
408adf0c3659535913ec0d9e27c0580c