(262) 392-2162 | info@aquarius-systems.com
  • Quote
  • Resources
  • Careers
  • en English
    af Afrikaanssq Albanianam Amharichy Armenianaz Azerbaijanieu Basquebe Belarusianbn Bengalibs Bosnianbg Bulgarianca Catalanceb Cebuanony Chichewazh-TW Chinese (Traditional)co Corsicanhr Croatiancs Czechda Danishen Englisheo Esperantoet Estoniantl Filipinofi Finnishfr Frenchfy Frisiangl Galicianka Georgiande Germanel Greekgu Gujaratiht Haitian Creoleha Hausahaw Hawaiianiw Hebrewhi Hindihmn Hmonghu Hungarianis Icelandicig Igboid Indonesianga Irishja Japanesejw Javanesekn Kannadakk Kazakhkm Khmerko Koreanku Kurdish (Kurmanji)ky Kyrgyzlo Laola Latinlv Latvianlt Lithuanianlb Luxembourgishmk Macedonianmg Malagasyms Malayml Malayalammt Maltesemi Maorimr Marathimn Mongolianmy Myanmar (Burmese)ne Nepalino Norwegianps Pashtofa Persianpl Polishpa Punjabiro Romaniansm Samoangd Scottish Gaelicsr Serbianst Sesothosn Shonasd Sindhisi Sinhalask Slovaksl Slovenianso Somalies Spanishsu Sudanesesw Swahilisv Swedishtg Tajikta Tamilte Teluguth Thaitr Turkishuk Ukrainianur Urduuz Uzbekvi Vietnamesecy Welshxh Xhosayi Yiddishyo Yorubazu Zulu

Aquarius-Systems

  • Home
  • Equipment
    Weed Harvesters
    Aquatic Excavators
    Canal Cleaners
    Vegetation Shredders
    Trash Skimmers
    Transport Barges
    Trailers
    Offloading Conveyors
  • Service
    Parts & Service
    Equipment Manuals
    Safety Guide
  • About Us
  • Media
  • Latest
  • Connect

Wyoming Game and Fish Exploring Ways to Address Algae

  • 0
/ Published in Uncategorized
Chara, a branchy aquatic algae
Whether you visited Renner Reservoir for the first or 10th time this summer, you probably noticed a branchy, aquatic algae called chara covering the bottom of the reservoir. Compared to other aquatic plants, which are referred to as macrophytes, chara forms denser mats offering less habitat for fish and a less palatable meal for invertebrates.
algaeaquatic plantschara
TOP