What plant drinks the most water?
Category:
home and garden
landscaping
Plants That Like to Be in Water
- Water hyssop.
- Pickerelweed.
- Cattail.
- Iris.
- Canna.
- Elephant's ear.
- Swamp sunflower.
- Scarlet swamp hibiscus.
Accordingly, which plants absorb the most water?
Like trees, shrubs interrupt rainfall before it hits the ground and absorb moisture from the soil through well-developed root systems. Native shrubs for wet areas include redosier dogwood (Cornus sericea), hardy in USDA zones 3 through 8, and spice bush (Lindera benzoin), hardy in USDA zones 4 through 9.
- Blue Camassia. Most bulbs can't take moist soil, but camass lily (Camassia leichtlinii 'Caerulea') is an exception.
- Bee Balm.
- Amethyst Pearl Phlox.
- Butterfly Weed.
- 'Over in Gloryland' Siberian Iris.
- Summerific 'Perfect Storm' Hibiscus.
- 'Black Stockings' Meadow Rue.
- Ostrich Fern.
Additionally, what Trees soak up the most water?
8 Water-Loving Trees
- River birch, Betula nigra. This tree is very adaptable.
- Willow oak. No landscape is complete without a great shade tree and all landscapes need oak trees.
- Bald cypress.
- Swamp white oak.
- Sweet bay magnolia.
- Weeping willow.
- Black tupelo.
- American sycamore.
- Cornus 'Midwinter Fire':
- Caltha palustris:
- Also called the marsh marigold, this plant can cope with very wet conditions.
- Astilbe:
- Gunnera manicata:
- Candelabra primula:
- Sanguisorba officinalis:
- Trollius europaeus: