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Some people still use Typha down to stuff clothing items and pillows.
Typha can be used as a source of starch to produce ethanol.
Today paper from Typha is merely used as an expensive decorative paper.
For the local tribes, Typha was one of the most important plants and every part of the plant had multiple uses.
He has also studied differentiation and geographical distributions of ecotypes in Typha.
The lake is fringed with beds of Typha, as well as wetlands.
Because of their high productivity in northern latitudes, Typha is considered as a bio-energy crop.
The larvae have been recorded living in the basal sheaths of Typha.
The larvae feed on Iris pseudacorus, typha and similar watery plants.
The larvae bore the stems of Typha and Scirpus species.
Surrounding the lake, there are extensive swamps where Typha and Cyperus grow.
The most widespread species is Typha latifolia, extending across the entire temperate northern hemisphere.
July to August, in stems of Typha.
It fills a similar niche to that of Typha and often grows with it, though usually in shallower water.
The reed-marsh is dominated by Phragmites, invaded in places by Typha.
Typha plants are monoecious and bear unisexual, wind-pollinated flowers, developing in dense spikes.
One Native American word for Typha meant "fruit for papoose's bed".
The nutrients support the profuse growth of Water Hyacinth and Typha in the shallow zone.
Typha can be dipped in wax or fat and then lit as a candle, the stem serving as a wick.
The larvae feed on various wetland plants, including Typha, Pontederia and Eichhornia species.
Typha angustifolia var.
Typha leaves are alternate and mostly basal to a simple, jointless stem that eventually bears the flowering spikes.
Soras are commonly reported in plant communities dominated by Cattails (Typha spp.)
Outside of this family, the name is used for Typha, a genus in the Typhaceae family, also known as reedmace or cattail.