Which plant live in fresh water?
It depends what you mean by ‘in’ – mangroves are about the only plants to live in salt water (other than alge – seaweed etc.); aquatic plants (pond weed etc.) and lillies etc. actually live perminantly in fresh water (as in water in ponds etc.), but there are many species that live in water logged (generally anaerobic if this is for something for school) conditions – reeds, mosses, sundew, bog cotton, heather, birch; and most plants can survive in fresh water for some time (the problem is that their roots need air and also can rot if they’re there for too long). If you look at outside the uk, one of the most abundant species on our planet – rice – is often grown in water (73% of world rice yield is grown in paddy fields), and think about other areas where there’s lots of biological diversity and lots of fresh water – the amazon river has a hudgely diverse flora – many species of plants in different plant families live there, and add to that some of the areas of forest (hudge areas!) ar