SEDGES
Any rush-like or grass-like plants of the genus Carex, growing in cold places. It grows in the tundra where Lemmings use it as bedding and a food source.Sedge grass has a solid stem and true grass has a hollow stem.
Any of a family of tufted marsh plants.
Grasses and sedges.
cellulose-rich, protein-poor fodder. Low nutritive grasses and sedges.
Clary sage has the botanical name of Salvia sclarea. It is a dicot. A dicot has two leaves inside each seed.
Not much differentiates sedges from true grasses, as both are monocot flowering plants. Sedges feature triangular cross-sections and spiraling leaves and a perennial growth pattern, and include the water chestnut and papyrus. True grasses, on the other hand, feature circular cross-sections and only an annual growth, and include wheat and maize.
All reeds are members of the order Paoles which includes grasses, bromeliads and sedges. The wikipedia article lists 11 types but there are probably plenty more.
Superficially resembling grasses or rushes, there are about 5,500 species of sedges. Sedges are often found in wetlands, or areas with poor soil. Sawgrass and water chestnut are well-known sedges.
Yes, birds do in fact eat eat sedges.
No.
yes
A hedge is yes
Grasses and sedges.
caribou, moose, ect.
No. They eat grasses and sedges.
Whenever they can on grasses, sedges, shrubs and herbs
Grasses, sedges, herbs, mosses and shrubs
small animals
Grasses, sedges, mosses. shrubs, lichen and herbs