Arundo donax - Wikipedia Arundo donax is a tall, perennial grass in the subfamily Arundinoideae, characterised by C3 photosynthesis The stems produced during the first growing season are unbranched and photosynthetic
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Arundo donax - Calflora Arundo and donax are respectively the old Latin and Greek names for reed [3] Arundo donax grows in damp soils, either fresh or moderately saline, and is native to the Greater Middle East
Arundo Control and Restoration Project – Delta Conservancy Arundo (Arundo donax) is a non-native invasive grass that grows up to 25 feet tall along the edges of sloughs and canals in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, and is also abundant in the Sacramento and San Joaquin River watersheds
Arundo | Experience Nature Films – Support Land Conservation — Ojai . . . Arundo is an aggressive, highly invasive grass that resembles bamboo and can grow in dense stands up to 30 feet tall Arundo threatens our water supply, exacerbates flood hazards, disconnects important habitats, and creates a dangerous fire risk
Healthy Streams for Angelenos | Watershed Monitoring Arundo donax, an introduced riparian plant species (commonly referred to as giant reed), has significant negative impacts on water availability, water quality (i e sediment loads, temperature, pathogens, nutrient loading, flow modification), habitat, fires, and infrastructure
Santa Clara River Watershed-Wide Arundo donax Management Program (WWAM) Arundo is considered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature to be one of the 100 most serious invasive species in the world One acre of Arundo can consume 11 75-acre feet, or almost 4 million gallons, of water annually