Yes ,they are types of bushes.
Flowerless plants : ferns, mushrooms, mosses, lichens, and seaweeds are all alike.
Weeds, bushes, willows are some common swamp plants.
grasses, weeds, bushes and any tree branches and leaves they can reach Answer They mainly eat grass, weeds, and leaves. They get their water from streams, lakes, or any other water source available. Hope this helps! - cathrynsaywat
Ferns are the first plants to grow after a forest fire as it is a soilbinder. This means ferns, especially the Bracken fern, can withstand a fire or other extremes by gripping the soil with a vast network of roots.
Some plants do not have flowers. Nearly all the plants you see around you are flowering plants: trees, bushes, vines, grasses and the "weeds". The flowers may not be big and showy, but they are there if you look for them. When flowering plants spread all over the world, about a hundred million years ago, they pushed aside the ferns and mosses and cone-bearing trees that had covered the planet for many millions of years. Of course, those plants are still here but they no longer have the planet to themselves as they did before the development of the super-successful flowering plants.
This will depend on the area that the cow is residing in. For example, some common plants in Ontario, Canada include trees, different types of grasses, thistles, milk weeds, bushes, wild carrots.
grass,weeds,leaves,bushes
Grasses is a botanical category. Weeds is an aesthetic one. If you don't want it growing where it is, it's a weed (even if you might want it growing somewhere else). It may, or may not, also be a grass: Bermuda grass and crabgrass are commonly considered weeds, but both are nonetheless true grasses.
grass,bushes,weeds,thickets,fruit
Grasses are not herbs.They are just grasses.I'm not sure if there is a specific name.So I just know they are called grasses and don't have another name.
Producers ex: grass, bushes, weeds, shurbs
Flowers grew up among the weeds and grasses in the meadow.