Thursday 19 May 2011

Taboa

This is taboa (Typha dominguensis), a common perennial reed. Very very common! Actually, it has spread to tropical and temperate regions all over the world, in marshes and wetlands, even mangrove swamps. It shoots up to about 2 metres tall and releases millions of seeds, so it quickly takes over any area where it becomes established and can be something of a nuisance.

A coastal Restinga marsh near Vitoria, Brazil

Has it's uses though. The fibre is tough and durable and can be used to make baskets and handicrafts, even paper. In Turkey the flower stalk is applied to burns and wounds and apparently works quite well.

Releasing seeds

Perhaps it's most beneficial property though is as a sponge. As it grows, taboa absorbs vast amounts of material from the water around it, most of which accumulates in it's tissues. So taboa beds can absorb Phosphorous from agricultural runoff which would otherwise cause algal blooms, or even heavy metals like Zinc from mining pollution. You just wait and then cut and take away the reeds. There are several studies around the world deliberately making lagoons of Typha dominguensis as a low cost way of cleaning waste water.

It's hard to say whether taboa is such a benefit environmentally. It swamps (as it were) native species in clean water, but cleans polluted water so that other creatures can survive, as well as providing cover for insects and small fish. Anyway, it can be very useful for us humans.

1 comment:

SteveK said...

Grown under proper (clean water and soil) this is one of the most productive food plants there is. It is also a dessication machine that kills lakes and rivers. It is a silt making machine that will raise a lake bed out of contact with the groundwater, to the destruction of both. Typha Australis in Lake Chad is the driving force behind North Africa's desertification. It is all biofuel, processable in many ways. Thanks for helping increase awareness of it.