Weed Control

How to Control Aquatic Weed Types and Aquatic Plants

Ponds grow a variety of pond weed types, many of which look similar. The aquatic weed identification information below lists the most common weed types -- including emergent, submerged, and floating weeds -- to help you explore and identify aquatic weeds in your pond or lake.

For those looking for weed control solutions, Lake Restoration has developed all-in-one pond and lake weed control kits that make it unnecessary to identify the type of weeds in your pond. Feel free to use the information below to facilitate your pond weed identification goals, or contact us today to talk to our customer support team about the right control product for your pond or lake.

Visual example of types of aquatic weeds, including submersed weeds, free floating weeds, emergent weeds, rooted floating weeds, algae, and excess nutrients.

Blue green algae swirling across pond.

Blue Green Algae

Blue green algae can be green, brown, or reddish purple looking in the water.
Starry stonewort cluster close up out of water.

Starry Stonewort

Starry Stonewort resembles a submerged plant and can be identified by the little white stars amongst the gelatin green branches.
Planktonic algae around a boat.

Planktonic Algae

Planktonic algae look like pea soup or spilled paint.
A stick coming out of a pond covered in filamentous algae.

Filamentous Algae

Filamentous algae have an appearance like that of stringy hairs or cotton.
One flat stem pondweed stem with leaves and a nickel on white background.

Flat Stem Pondweed

Flat stem pondweed has both a flat stem and flat leaves with no floating leaves.
American pondweed close in small cluster.

American Pondweed

American Pondweed has elliptical shaped floating leaves that are green and often have brown spots.
Close up of small pondweed.

Small Pondweed

Small pondweed produces only submersed leaves that are light green and nearly three inches long and less than a quarter inch wide.
Floating leaf pondweed with flower spikes close up on top of the water.

Floating Leaf Pondweed

Floating leaf pondweed has long, narrow, stiff submersed leaves and two to four inch long floating leaves on long stalks.
Brown muck along shoreline and into water.

Muck

Muck is made of decomposing organic material, can be brown to black, and have an unpleasant odor.
Isolated Robbin's pondweed in front of white background.

Robbin’s Pondweed

Robbin’s pondweed has thick and coarse submersed leaves with a prominent yellow vein in the middle.
White stem pondweed close up.

White Stem Pondweed

White stem pondweed has a zig zag stem that is sparingly branched. Alternately arranged wavy green leaves have a yellow midvein and no floating leaves.
Illinois pondweed under water surface.

Illinois Pondweed

Illinois pondweed has lance shaped submerged leaves eight inches long that come to a point at the end.
Group of large leaf pondweed.

Large Leaf Pondweed

Large leaf pondweed has long, wide floating leaves that curl away from the stem.
Marine naiad close up of spikes and stems.

Marine Naiad

Marine naiad is a submerged plant with small brittle leaves that are stiff and toothed.
Carolina fanwort in aquarium close up.

Fanwort

Fanwort is a delicate, feathery looking submerged plant. It has a few elongated floating leaves. The slender stems have a thin jelly coating.
Murky water with excess nutrients, fish and a few plants visible.

Excess Nutrients

Excess nutrients can make the water look cloudy, murky, or muddy.
Egeria extreme close up on fingers.

Egeria

Egeria is a submerged plant with three to six leaves per whorl and no midrib teeth.
Group of elodea.

Elodea

Elodea is a submerged plant that has three leaves per whorl and no midrib teeth.
Group of eelgrass underwater.

Eelgrass

Eelgrass has long ribbon like leaves with very distinctive veins like that of celery.
Cluster of water buttercup flowers.

Water Buttercup

Water buttercup has showy white or yellow flowers during the summer months and has finely divided leaves.