Salvinia or watermosses is a genus of free-floating aquatic plant in the family Salviniaceae. The genus is named in honor of 17th-century Italian naturalist Anton Maria Salvini, and the generic name was first published in 1754 by French botanist Jean-François Séguier in Plantae Veronenses, a description of the plants found around Verona. Pl. Veron. 3: 52. 1754. Twelve species are recognized, at least three of which ( S. molesta, S. herzogii, and S. minima) are believed to be hybrids in part because their sporangium are found to be empty.
Salvinia is related to the other water ferns, including the mosquito fern Azolla. Recent sources include both Azolla and Salvinia in Salviniaceae, although each genus was formerly given its own family.
Salvinia, like the other ferns in order Salviniales, are heterosporous, producing spores of differing sizes. However, leaf development in Salvinia is unique. The upper side of the floating leaf, which appears to face the stem axis, is morphologically abaxial.J. G. Croxdale 1978, 1979, 1981.
Salvinia cucullata is one of just two fern species for which a reference genome has been published.
They bear sporocarps of two types, either megasporangia that are few in number (approximately 10), each with single megaspore, or many microsporangia, each with 64 microspores. Spores are of two kinds and sizes, both globose, trilete. Megagametophytes and microgametophytes protruding through sporangium wall; megagametophytes floating on water surface with archegonia directed downward; microgametophytes remaining fixed to sporangium wall.
The small, hairlike growths, known as or microgametical follicles, are not known to have any productive function, and are currently a biological mystery.
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One proposed use takes advantage of the hydrophobic , which do not repel oil. This makes them candidates for mopping up oil spills, as they become saturated with oil in thirty seconds. Salvinia molesta served as a model for a similarly hydrophobic synthetic polycarbonate.
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