Terrestrial plant

This page is about plants that grow on land rather than in water or on trees; for the major plant lineage known as land plants, see Embryophyte
Terrestrial plants

A terrestrial plant is a plant that grows on or in or from land.[1] Other types of plants are aquatic (living in water), epiphytic (living on trees) and lithophytic (living in or on rocks).

Non-terrestrial plants

Aquatic plants

The distinction between an aquatic plant and a terrestrial plant is often blurred because of the tendency for many aquatic species to have both submersed and emersed forms and because many terrestrial plants are able to tolerate periodic submersion. There are relatively few obligate submersed aquatic plants, (i.e. species that cannot tolerate emersion for even relatively short periods) but some examples include members of Hydrocharitaceae and Cabombaceae, Ceratophyllum, and Aldrovanda and most macroalgae (e.g. Chara and Nitella). Most aquatic plants can, or prefer to, grow in the emersed form, and most only flower in that form. Many terrestrial plants can tolerate extended periods of inundation, and this is often part of the natural habitat of the plant where flooding is common. These plants (termed helophytes) tolerate extended periods of waterlogging around the roots and even complete submersion under flood waters. Growth rates of helophytes decrease significantly during these periods of complete submersion and if water levels do not recede the plant will ultimately decline and perish.

Epiphytes

Main article: Epiphyte

An epiphyte is a plant that grows non-parasitically upon another plant.

See also

References

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