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phragmites
(redirected from Phragmites australis)

   Also found in: Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
phrag·mi·tes  (frg-mtz)
n.
Any of several perennial reeds of the genus Phragmites in the grass family, found worldwide in marshes and wetlands and having stems up to nearly 6 meters (20 feet) long.

[Latin phragmts, kind of reed growing in hedges, from Greek, fencing in, from phragma, fence, from phrassein, to fence in.]
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.phragmites - reeds of marshes and riversides in tropical or temperate regionsPhragmites - reeds of marshes and riversides in tropical or temperate regions
liliopsid genus, monocot genus - genus of flowering plants having a single cotyledon (embryonic leaf) in the seed
family Graminaceae, family Gramineae, family Poaceae, Graminaceae, Gramineae, grass family, Poaceae - the grasses: chiefly herbaceous but some woody plants including cereals; bamboo; reeds; sugar cane
carrizo, common reed, ditch reed, Phragmites communis - tall North American reed having relative wide leaves and large plumelike panicles; widely distributed in moist areas; used for mats, screens and arrow shafts


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Other topics of the 12 chapters include management of invasive aquatic plants in France, the allelopathic effect of Phragmites australis on cyanobacterial growth, ALA-D activity as a biomarker of lead contamination, and radionuclide distribution within the Chernobyl accident exclusion zone.
An imported form of Phragmites australis can sit around without doing much harm but then suddenly spread relentlessly, choking out the daintier native form of the same species and other wetland plants.
The scientific team detected the biological concentrations of mesoxalic acid in Delaware wetlands, in stands of both exotic and native Phragmites australis.
 
 
 
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