Wolffia Explained

Wolffia is a genus of aquatic plants with a cosmopolitan distribution.[1] They include the smallest flowering plants on Earth.[2] Commonly called watermeal or duckweed,[3] [4] these aquatic plants resemble specks of cornmeal floating on the water. They often float together in pairs or form floating mats with related plants, such as Lemna and Spirodela species.

Description

Wolffia are free-floating aquatic plants with fronds that are nearly spherical to cylindrical in shape and lack airspaces or veins. They do not have roots. Their rarely seen flowers originate from a cavity on the upper surface of the frond, and each flower has one stamen and one pistil.

Although Wolffia can reproduce by seed, they usually use vegetative reproduction. A mother frond has a terminal conical cavity from which it produces daughter fronds.

Physiology

The growth rate of Wolffia varies within and among species. The rates of photosynthesis and respiration also vary proportionately to growth rate. The fastest growth rate (in fact, the fastest growth rate of any flowering plant) is shown by a clone of Wolffia microscopica, with a doubling time of 29.3 hours.[5]

As food

Wolffia are a potential high-protein livestock food source. One species, W. microscopica, is over 20% protein by dry weight and has high content of essential amino acids. They have historically been collected from the water and eaten as a vegetable in Asia.[6]

Species

, eleven species are accepted on Kew's Plants of the World Online:

References

  1. Web site: Wolffia Horkel ex Schleid Plants of the World Online Kew Science . 2022-07-05 . Plants of the World Online . en.
  2. Web site: 2009-11-25 . The Charms of Duckweed . 2022-07-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20091125213317/http://www.mobot.org/jwcross/duckweed/duckweed.htm . 25 November 2009 . dead.
  3. Web site: UC/JEPS: Jepson Manual treatment for WOLFFIA . 2022-07-05 . ucjeps.berkeley.edu.
  4. Web site: USDA Plants Database . 2022-07-05 . plants.usda.gov.
  5. Sree . K. Sowjanya . Sudakaran . Sailendharan . Appenroth . Klaus-J. . 2015-09-11 . How fast can angiosperms grow? Species and clonal diversity of growth rates in the genus Wolffia (Lemnaceae) . Acta Physiologiae Plantarum . en . 37 . 10 . 204 . 10.1007/s11738-015-1951-3 . 255376153 . 1861-1664.
  6. Appenroth . Klaus-J. . Sree . K. Sowjanya . Böhm . Volker . Hammann . Simon . Vetter . Walter . Leiterer . Matthias . Jahreis . Gerhard . 2017-02-15 . Nutritional value of duckweeds (Lemnaceae) as human food . Food Chemistry . en . 217 . 266–273 . 10.1016/j.foodchem.2016.08.116 . 27664634 . 0308-8146.

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