Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 June 2017
A 3-year ecological study of physical, chemical, and biological factors affecting the growth of submersed aquatic weeds was conducted in four irrigation and drainage canals in south Florida. Growth of aquatic vegetation was influenced by light intensity which decreased in a geometric ratio to water depth. The light penetration into the water was influenced by dissolved coloring matter and turbidity. A high concentration of nitrogen was found in three of the canals. Nitrogen entered the canals as sewage effluent discharged into the water and as fertilizer runoff from surrounding farmland. Density of aquatic vegetation harvested at intervals of 6 months from clipped plots varied from zero in a newly dug canal to 22,000 lb green weight/A in an old established canal. During the 3-year study, there was a complete shift of the vegetation from southern naiad (Najas guadalupensis (Spreng.) Magnus) to Florida elodea (Hydrilla verticillata Casp.) in two of the canals, but there was no change in plant species in two canals. No other chemical and physical factors evaluated in the study limited submersed aquatic weed growth in these canals.