Tnere are literally thousands, but heres a few common ones you'll see on lawns:
Kentucky Bluegrass - Poa pretensis
Annual Bluegrass - Poa annua
Creeping Bentgrass - Agrostis stolonifera
Red Fescue - Festuca rubra
Perennial Ryegrass - Lolium perenne
Common Bermuda grass - Cynodon dactylon
Zoysia - Zoysia sp.
Latin names are in italics.
I would have no idea
does that help?
Second answer.
There are a lot of different species of grass so they all have different names. Festuca glauca, Agropyron repens, Poa annua are just three of the names out of thousands.
http://www.malag.aes.oregonstate.edu/wildflowers/plantlist.php/restrict%5Bplanttype%5D-Grass
this website has many different types of grasses with their scientific names.
Yes, both sugarcane and bamboo belong to the grass family, Poaceae. They are tall, woody grasses with hollow stems and are characterized by their rapid growth and versatility of use.
The genus of grasses to which rice belongs is Oryza.
A treeless plain where grasses and moss grow is called a grassland or a tundra. Grasslands are characterized by vast stretches of grasses with few or no trees, while tundras are cold regions where mosses and grasses are the dominant vegetation due to harsh conditions for tree growth.
Biotic factors in temperate grasslands include grasses, flowers, insects, birds, small mammals, and grazing herbivores like bison or deer. These living organisms interact with one another and with their environment to create a dynamic ecosystem in temperate grassland regions.
Scientific names for organisms typically include the genus and species names.
No, grasses are not fungi. Grasses and fungi are two different things.
what is grasses predators
no, all grasses are monocots.
The possessive form of the plural noun grasses is grasses'.example: The students tested types of grasses' viability by planting them in different locations.
Mid grasses
tumbleweedsClarification: Tumbleweeds are not grasses. I know of no grasses that tumble in the desert.
Yes, i have been recently researching the arctic tundra and there are grasses. Light grasses though.
Yes, grasses have fibrous root systems.
grasses in the sea = algae
Prairies are grasslands and mainly covered with grasses or brush.
The homophone for "grasses" or "stalks" is "glasses" - it sounds the same as "grasses" and "stalks" when spoken aloud.
Yes, trees and grasses are decomposers.