Wheatgrass and annual ryegrass.
Cool Season Type Grasses: Bentgrass, Kentucky Bluegrass, Rough Bluegrass, Red Fescue, Annual Ryegrass, Perennial Ryegrass. Typical Transition Zone Grasses: Kentucky Bluegrass; Tall Fescue; Perennial Ryegrass; Thermal Blue; Zoysiagrass. Warm Season Type Grasses: Bahia, Bermuda Grass; Buffalo Grass; Carpet Grass; Centipede; St. Augustine Grass; Zoysiagrass
grasses
Annual- A plant that can finish its life cycle in just one year. an example would be a tulip. Perrinanial- A plant that takes more than two years to complete its cycle. one example would be a conifer. There is also a biennial plants that take two years only. I only know this because we are on our plant unit in school. Hope this helped!
blue grass
Wild native grasses.
Signal grass is Urochloa decumbens. Other like grasses are Mauritius signal grass (Urochlora mutica), palisade signal grass (Urochloa brizantha), and annual or garden signal grass (Urochloa panicoides).
Annual grass refers to grass species that complete their entire life cycle—germination, growth, flowering, and seed production—within one year. These grasses typically germinate in the spring, grow rapidly, and die off by the end of the growing season, often leaving seeds to germinate in the following year. Common examples include species like crabgrass and foxtail. Annual grasses are often used in agriculture and landscaping for quick cover and soil stabilization.
They are grasses, and have large seed heads with very large seeds that can be easily harvested but don't shatter easily when brushed by or touched, like what happens with their wild cousins. They also have a very shallow root system, which enables them to be an annual, not a perennial. They have a shallow root system because 80% of their energy goes into seed production, not leaf nor root like the more native and pasture-type grasses do.
Vegetation with shallow root systems, such as annual grasses, can increase runoff because they do not hold water as effectively as deep-rooted plants. When it rains, water flows over the ground instead of being absorbed by the soil, leading to increased runoff.
They eat plants. Grasses and leaves and small branches from trees.
There are no plants in caves,except for the grasses and such at the mouth of a cave, as there is no sunlight.
They live off of grasses and leaves of plants they are mainly herbivores