Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Home
My FWRI
Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission HomeFish and Wildlife Research InstituteMyFlorida.com
Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission HomeHomeAbout FWRIContactFAQsLocationsSearchSite Map

Inside FWRI

Research:

Related Articles
 border= Research Spotlight: Seagrass Beds Play an Important Role in the Health of Tampa Bay
 border= Boat Propeller Scar Damage - Greater Charlotte Harbor
 border= Boat Propeller Scar Damage - Greater Charlotte Harbor
 border= Dr. Ronald C. Phillips, Florida's Pioneer Seagrass Biologist and Active International Coastal Ecologist, Dies at Age 73
 border= A Comparison of Mechanical and Manual Seagrass Planting Techniques at Three Sites in Tampa Bay
More Related Articles...





     
Explore: 


  Home : Features : Seagrasses : Seagrass Information

Seagrass and Land Plants

This article gives a brief description of the structural similaries and differences between seagrasses and vascular plants found on land.

Although seagrasses live in marine waters, they evolved millions of years ago from land plants and have many of the same morphological features, such as leaves, roots, flowers, seeds, and conducting tissues. Similar to terrestrial vegetation, seagrasses use the process of photosynthesis to manufacture their own food and produce oxygen through structures called chloroplasts. Land plants have chloroplasts in both the stems and leaves, but in seagrasses, chloroplasts are found only in the leaves. Since seagrasses don’t need to overcome the force of gravity, they don’t have the strong supportive stems and trunks found in land plants; instead, they depend on the natural buoyancy of the water to provide support. This allows seagrass blades to remain flexible to bend and move with the force of currents and waves. To protect leaves from this high-energy environment, however, seagrasses have developed tube-like structures, called sheaths, which extend down through the vertical rhizome. This structure, not found in land plants, protects the meristem and any newly formed leaves, which extend up through the sheath of previously formed leaves.




























Image source: Hemminga, M.A. and C.M. Duarte, 2000. Seagrass Ecology. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. Modified with permission.









Quicklinks
Headquarters
Sport Fish Restoration InformationFish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Home Wildlife Foundation of Florida Web Site Wildlife Alert Information
Fish and Wildlife Research Institute
100 Eighth Avenue SE
St. Petersburg, Florida 33701-5020
PH: 727-896-8626

Mission Statement
Through effective research and technical knowledge, we provide timely information and guidance
to protect, conserve, and manage Florida's fish and wildlife resources.

Advertising Statement and FWC Web Site Disclaimer

DG.lts
Developed & Hosted by DataGlyphics, Inc.