Decoration for our lawns, plants for grazing our livestock, food for livestock, used for art projects, basket-weaving, nature uses grasses to complete the food chain for wild animals and to provide an ecosystem for all living things, etc.
Mainly pasture grass. But really, grass is grass, no matter where it's grown or what it's grown for. The grass you have in your lawn can be the same species of grass that can be (and probably is) grown in pastures for livestock.
Generally if you are referring to grazing animals such as cows, horses and sheep, they would be food dependent on grassesthat grow in pastures or fields. Grasses are also found in ranges or rangeland, which is a "fancy" word for native grassland where cattle, bison, elk, horses and other ungulates often graze.
In a more general sense you can call food meant for livestock as feed or feedstuff.
Food for grazing animals is called forage if the animals just walk around in the pasture and get it themselves. It's called fodder if humans bring it to the animals.
A pasture.
forage
Yes...grazing animals like horses for example, eat grass therefore they live where their food is.
We call it, Farming
The disease that affects human sand grazing animals is called the plague.
Animals were an important source of food.
The Savannah
Gazelles are grazing animals, so they acquire food by migrating around their habitat and eating whatever green material they can find.
Provide food for grazing animals and hold the soil in place
Any group of grazing animals is called a herd. for example, heard of cattle or a herd of horses.
When an animal walks very slowly in search of food it is called foraging or scavenging. When these animals find food, they are grazing. Wild cats are stalking when they are very slowly following prey.
Cows can get food on their own when they are out on pasture. The act to which they are able to do so is called "grazing."
Growth for grazing animals in the grasslands of the Rift Valley is dependent on annual rains.
why was there so little room for grazing animals in ancient egyty