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Curated catalog

Gratiola officinalis

Gratiola officinalis

Gratiola officinalis: aquatic plant of the family Plantaginaceae. Light: Medium to high.

Family
Plantaginaceae
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

4 °C - 25 °C

pH

6 - 7.5

Water type

Freshwater

Light

Medium to high

CO2

n/a

Description

Geographical Origin & Habitat:

Endemic to a massive geographical range stretching across Europe and Northern Asia. Gratiola officinalis (Common Hedgehyssop) is a highly adaptable, true amphibious bog plant. It naturally colonizes the shallow, sun-drenched, muddy margins of slow-moving rivers, marshes, and temporary wet meadows. It is a wildly aggressive, deeply rooted survivor perfectly evolved to exploit seasonal flooding by rapidly transitioning from terrestrial creeping growth to dense, vertical submerged thickets.

Taxonomy & Genetics:

Scientifically classified within the Plantaginaceae family, Gratiola officinalis is a globally recognized native European wetland species with a long history in traditional herbal medicine (though it is highly toxic). Taxonomically, it is characterized by its opposite leaves and creeping rhizome. Genetically, it is completely hard-wired for extreme vegetative propagation and rapid aquatic adaptation. Its DNA forces the production of distinctively different leaf forms depending on whether it is grown emerged or submerged.

Physical Structure:

The architectural structure of G. officinalis is intensely dense, heavily branched, and strictly vertical when submerged. It is a massive, highly flexible stem plant. The foundation is a creeping, subterranean rhizome that deploys an aggressive white root system to anchor itself in the mud. Submerged stems erupt vertically from this rhizome. The leaves are arranged oppositely directly on the main stems. The foliage is strictly lanceolate to narrowly elliptic, small (2-4 cm), with distinctly serrated (toothed) margins.

Color & Texture:

The coloration is distinctly pure, intensely solid, and visually calming. Grown submerged under intense lighting, the dense thickets of vertical stems and opposite leaves are a solid, glowing bright apple-green to a translucent grassy-green. Because it completely lacks any genetic mechanism for red anthocyanin pigments, it remains an intensely bright pure green even under blasting high-intensity light. The texture is distinctly crisp, highly flexible, and beautifully smooth, giving the dense bush a feathery appearance.

Care and observations

Lighting & CO2:

It is a highly demanding, energy-hungry stem plant when kept submerged. While it will technically survive in medium-light aquariums, its spectacular dense growth will completely fail; the lower leaves will rot and fall off, and the stems will stretch straight upward, becoming bare and ugly. To force the violent branching and tight internodes necessary for a plush, dense bush, blasting, high-intensity LED lighting is absolutely mandatory. Pressurized CO2 drastically accelerates its growth and density.

Nutrition & Substrate:

As a highly vigorous, amphibious bog plant, G. officinalis is a terrifyingly aggressive root feeder that also heavily absorbs nutrients from the water column. Its creeping rhizome system strictly demands a very deep, heavily nutrient-dense substrate. It absolutely demands premium aquasoil heavily enriched with iron and macro-nutrients. It will fail to thrive in plain gravel. If starved of root or water-column nutrients, the delicate green stems will quickly turn yellow, become brittle, and dissolve.

Water Chemistry:

Originating from temperate Europe and Asia, it is practically invincible regarding standard water parameters, with one massive exception: it drastically prefers cooler water. It thrives effortlessly in unheated or cold-water aquariums (10-22°C), making it a spectacular choice for native biotopes. While it will tolerate mildly heated tanks (up to 25°C), high tropical heat will cause it to melt. It is exceptionally adaptable to pH (6.0 - 8.0) and thrives in hard alkaline water. It prefers slow to moderate water flow.

Space Management & Placement:

Due to its rapid vertical growth and dense branching nature, Gratiola officinalis is strictly a dominant midground to background plant for aquariums. It MUST be planted in massive, dense bunches (creating a "street" or bush effect). Because it grows as a towering, heavily branching forest from a creeping rhizome, it will rapidly form a breathtaking, impenetrable green wall. It is exceptionally useful for Dutch-style aquascaping to create highly disciplined, pure green architectural blocks.

Pruning:

Pruning is a constant, brutal, and necessary weekly procedure if you wish to control its massive spread and maintain bush density. Never pull the rooted base out; it will disturb the substrate and break the creeping rhizome. To prune, you must aggressively "top" the flexible stems anywhere along their length. The lower cut portion will violently branch out from the nodes. You can immediately replant the cut tops into the substrate to rapidly propagate the dense forest.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest threat to this plant is tropical heat (26°C+), which will cause the entire plant to literally melt and turn to mush. Because its growth rate is so violently fast, it will rapidly strip the water column of all available nutrients. The moment it runs out of food, the green stems will become brittle, turn yellow, and dissolve into massive amounts of organic waste. The third major risk is severe self-shading; if the canopy gets too thick, the bases of the stems will completely rot away.

Plant profile

Placement
Sfondo, Centro vasca, Straße (Holland-Stil)
Botanical form
stem
Light
Medium to high
Growth
Lenta
Column fertilization
Fertilizzazione in colonna stabile, regolata su crescita e alghe
Root fertilization
Utile soprattutto per forme radicate; non prioritaria per epifite
Trimming
Rimuovere foglie deteriorate e potare senza destabilizzare il gruppo.
Propagation
Talee
Nutrients
I range di durezza, CO2 e nutrienti sono conservati nelle note di cura quando riportati dalla fonte.
Sensitivity
Evitare cambi bruschi di luce, CO2 o fertilizzazione.
Layout role
Sfondo, Centro vasca, Straße (Holland-Stil)

Image gallery

Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.