Within 48 hours of a fire gamba grass can be found recovering and resprouting.
Specifically, the plant in question (Andropogon gayanus) can be found growing natively in subtropical and tropical Africa. It is considered a noxious weed in Australia. It supports wildfires which kill desirable herbaceous and woody plants and from which it emerges stronger and more widespread.
The ashes after the fire would contain a lot of nutrients so the grass would take the nutrients and grow quickley.
the grass has a lot of roots. The grasses roots grow back fast after a fire.
yes, but it will grow back.
No but weeds will.
It is the green things that grow out of the ground in parks and usually in yards and garden. A lawn is the same as grass. Like, you hear people saying that they 'mowed the lawn'. It is a plant but lots of it grows out of the ground.
Yes and it might not grow back for a long time.
Yes
No. They lose their back legs to help them escape danger, but they do not have the ability to grow them back.
It's too hard and takes forever!
grass grow in a bunch
does grass only grow at night
no the earth would not look nice because the elephants eat the grass and the grass will grow back.