Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Wigeongrass (Ruppia maritima): a literature review

January 1, 1991

Wigeongrass (Ruppia maritima L.) is a submersed macrophyte of nearly cosmopolitan distribution and worldwide importance as a waterfowl food. Unfortunately, the plant no longer inhabits vast areas disturbed by human activities. Taxonomic status of the plant is uncertain, especially in North America. In mild climates, in habitats subject to environmental extremes, the plant behaves as an annual (vegetation perishes), or as a perennial in deeper, more stable habitats (some vegetative parts grow year round). Drupelets (seeds) provide a mechanism for wigeongrass to survive periods of drought and excessive water salinity. These sexual propagules can be washed ashore or carried by birds or fish for long distances.Wigeongrass mostly occurs in temporarily to permanently flooded mesohaline-hyperhaline estuarine wetlands, but it also occurs inland in fresh to hypersaline palustrine and lacustrine wetlands. Most populations inhabit warm, relatively unpolluted, and well lit waters

Publication Year 1991
Title Wigeongrass (Ruppia maritima): a literature review
Authors Harold A. Kantrud
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype Federal Government Series
Series Title Fish and Wildlife Research
Series Number 10
Index ID 2000099
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center
Was this page helpful?