19 Aquatic Greens

Muskrat enrichment meal of willow, cattail, horsetail and sedge.

The list below ranks the best 19 wildlife preferred aquatic greens.

The ranking is determined using two criteria to describe the role of the plant food in animals’ diets:

1) the number of species that utilizes the food,

2) how significant the food is within an individual species overall diet

So while a food may not be popular across a large number of species, it still could be strongly preferred by a few species. By coordinating with a rehabber’s specific needs, a forager can decide which plants to best target for collection.

Be sure to check any item listed below  in the database to see if there are any toxicological warnings associated with that plant or part of the plant.

Common Name Botanical Name

1

pondweed Potamogeton spp.

2

widgeongrass Ruppia maritima

3

waternymph (naiad) Najas spp.

4

muskgrass Chara spp.

5

wild celery Apium graveolens

6

duckweed Lemma spp.

7

eelgrass Zostera spp.

8

coon’s tail Ceratophyllum demersum

9

horned-pondweed Zannichellia palustris

10

waterlily Nymphaea spp.

11

saltgrass Distichlis spicata

12

cordgrass Spartina spp.

13

sea-lettuce Ulva spp.

14

flatsedge Cyperus spp.

15

pondweed, sago Stuckenia pectinata

16

bur-reed Sparganium spp.

17

rice cutgrass Leersia oryzoides

18

cordgrass, saltmarsh Spartina patens

19

cordgrass, smooth Spartina alterniflora

What Criteria is Used for the Ranking the Lists?

The main resources used to build this website usually rated foods in three levels of preference: high, middle and low. But, a plant may be high preference in Michigan but lower preference in Virginia. So the preference factor has some built in limitations. Still, it is factor #1 in the algorithm.

The second factor considered was how many species of animals ate the part of the plant in consideration. A seed that 29 species eat would outrank a seed that only 5 species eat.

From a foragers perspective, it would be ideal to collect the most highly preferable foods that feed the widest range of rehabilitation animals, right? Well maybe not.

Consider if a rehabilitator only works with foxes? To research which foods would be most beneficial in the “fox only” scenario, the only consideration that she would care about is the most preferred food for foxes, not how many other species ate it.

So the ranking lists are the most general broad interpretation of the data. You will want to generate your own lists from the search feature to find out just what you want to target for collection.

References Used with Permission

The Fire Effects Information System, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer).

Fire Effects Information System (2017) Plant species ecology literature reviews. Retrieved various dates from https://www.feis-crs.org/feis/

Martin, A.C., Zim, H.S., Nelson, A.L. (1951). American Wildlife and Plants: A Guide to Wildlife Food Habits. New York: Dover Publications.

Scott, M. (2013). Songbird Diet Index. National Wildlife Rehabilitators Association, St. Cloud, MN.