UNITED STATES
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
WASHINGTON
1927
PLANTS THAT HABITUALLY FEED ON GROUND WATER
Perhaps the most outstanding feature of the flora of the desert is its relation or lack of relation to the
water table. On the one hand are the plants which are adapted to extreme economy of water, which depend on the rains that occur at long intervals for their scanty water supplies, and which during prolonged periods of drought maintain themselves in a nearly dormant condition. These plants are known as xerophytes (from Greek roots meaning “dry plant”). On the other hand are the plants that habitually grow where they can send their roots down to the water table or to the capillary fringe immediately overlying the water table and are thus able to obtain a perennial and secure supply of water. These plants have been called phreatophytes.1 The term is obtained from two Greek roots and means a ” well plant.” Such a plant is literally a natural well with pumping equipment, lifting water from the zone
of saturation.