The species occupies a broad geographic range in the eastern United States, from Nova Scotia and Wisconsin south to Florida and Kansas (Crum and Anderson, 1981). The typical growth habit for this species is the formation of discreet mats or clumps along stream margins and on flood plains. ...
More recently, attention has turned toward an "external" measure to increase resilience and reduce vulnerability in the sense that this term is used by Wolters and Kuenzler [18], that of releasing fine-grained sediment now collecting behind tributary dams of the Platte and Kansas Rivers [10,20...