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About this item: This spring while sorting�plants, I used a couple of containment ponds to chuck trimmings and bits and things stuck together that I didn't want to mess with.��Lo and behold, those bits became a lush jungle of excellent plants but I don't have the time to sort them and don't want to kill them, so how about you get a bag for cheap? �
All the plants in this list are practically unkillable, requiring just water and basic lighting, not even gravel (most can either float or be weighted in bunches). �You will get at least a little of all these, as much as I can fit in about a liter of volume. �Sort them or keep them together, either way you'll have more of all of them in no time, as they all grow fast.�
Elodea (Elodea bifoliata). � Long, vivid green trailing plant with spikey-looking (but soft) small leaves. �Can float or be anchored in bunches. �
Bladderwort (Ultricularia foliosa). �At first glance looks like hornwort, but is much lovelier upon closer inspection. �From the stems grow delicately twisted branches, and from them grow vivid green tufts as soft as rabbit fur. �The photos I have here don't�do this plant justice, as they make it appear chaotic, but established in a tank (anchored, though they're good floating, too), they look like spooky trees with green smoke at the ends, and little berries (the bladders, which can trap and kill tiny pests like mosquito larvae and parasites). �
Water Spangle (Salvinia minima). �These little floaters reproduce by budding off, with each mature plant possessing several pea-sized leaves in a cluster. �The speed of their reproduction can vary a lot, by sunlight. �In a tank with basic lighting they spread slowly (you may feel like removing some monthly�or so), but in an outdoor pond, they will cover the entire surface in a matter of days. �This can be great for keeping your water cooler in summer, but if you don't like the coverage, they are much easier to remove than duckweed. �Speaking of the 'D' word, water spangle seems to have a lust for out-competing�a duckweed population like it's a sport. �For that reason alone, I love this plant. �Must float, no anchoring.�
Dwarf Water Lettuce. � In size, these are�between water spangle and frogbit, with rosette leaves of dusty pale green, and trailing roots below. �Their leaves lie flat on the water, not producing the upward-pointing cup like regular water lettuce, and these are obviously smaller. �You may know more about this plant�than I do; I'm fairly new to them but I can say they reproduce very fast outdoors, moderately in a tank (like water spangle). �Must float, cannot be anchored.
Frogbit (Limnobium laevigatum). �Similar in many ways to dwarf water lettuce, but with deeper, shinier green leaves, and longer roots. �Another good hiding place for little fish! �These grow almost as fast in a tank as a pond, and are very unfussy about chemistry, temperature, etc. �Mine lived all winter in outdoor shallow containers. �Must float, cannot be anchored.
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