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Water Chestnut Spreads in New York and Harms Aquatic Ecosystems and Recreation

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/ Published in Aquatic Invasive Species
Invasive Water Chestnut forms dense mats that displace native species and interfere with recreational activities.
Trapa natans is native to Western Europe and Africa and northeast Asia, including eastern Russia, China, and southeast Asia to Indonesia. Trapa natans was first introduced to North America in the mid- to late-1870s, when it is known to have been introduced into the Cambridge botanical garden at Harvard University around 1877. A decade later
aquatic ecosystemsaquatic invasive speciesboating accessdissolved oxygenfish habitatHudson Riverinvasive aquatic plantsNew York lakesrecreation impactssurface matsTrapa natanswater chestnut
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