Water gardeners and some pond owners deliberately introduce
water hyacinths because they are beautiful when in bloom. Many nurseries
sell these plants and encourage their cultivation. Others gather them
from ditches and bayous throughout the state.
Eventually, water gardeners learn by experience that this plant can
ruin ponds by eventually taking over the entire water surface. By blocking
the sunlight to the fish and plants, the water hyacinth effectively
starves submerged plants, leading to decay and reduction of food and
oxygen for aquatic life. Eventually, nothing lives beneath the surface,
and the pond becomes bog-like.
Recreational boaters and anglers consider water hyacinth to be a pest.
The dense mats of plants sometimes obstruct navigation for outboard
motor-propelled boats, and dense growth degrades living conditions for
an angler’s quarry – bream, bass and other fresh water fish.
Each time a boat cuts through a mat of water hyacinth, it breaks plants
away. The broken plant can start a new colony of water hyacinths in
the same lake, or it might be accidentally carried by the outboard motor
or boat trailer to a new location.
The state of Louisiana annually sprays large infestations of water
hyacinth at a cost of about $11 per acre.
