There are two ways grass can reproduce: asexually and sexually.
Asexually involves tillers, or rhizomes, which stem from the growth point of the parent grass, and grows and expands into daughter tillers or grasses. Bunch grasses and sod grasses have this characteristic.
Sexual reproduction involves the seed head or inflorescences. Grasses can have flowers much like other plants have flowers, only the kind of flowers that grasses have aren't really flowers, nor are pretty like "normal" flowers we're all aware of. But the male parts have the anthers and pollen heads that are exposed to the outside from these seed heads that are spread by the wind or by animals, and are deposited onto the stamens of the female flowers. This is where fertilization happens, and where seeds are produced. Once the seeds have fully matured, they separate from the matured (and dead) plant by shattering when brushed by by an animal or by wind, or when they are eaten by animals. The seed then makes contact with the soil, and stays there until the right conditions come by to help it grow.
Love grass refers to any of several annual or perennial grasses of the genus Eragrostis, which are cultivated for their delicate, spraylike flower-spikes. Love grass reproduces both sexually and asexually.
Grass is primarily dispersed through a variety of methods such as wind, water, animals, and human activity. Seeds can attach to fur or feathers of animals or be moved by water and wind, helping grass to spread and establish in new areas. Some grass species also produce underground rhizomes or stolons, allowing them to reproduce and spread horizontally.
No, club mosses do not produce seeds. They reproduce via spores that are produced in structures called sporangia at the tips of the plant's stems. These spores germinate to form new gametophyte plants.
Grass makes seeds through a process called flowering. Grass produces flowers that contain male and female reproductive organs. Pollen from the male part fertilizes the ovule in the female part, leading to seed formation. These seeds can then be dispersed, allowing the grass to reproduce.
Plants belonging to bryophytes and Pteridophytes etc. reproduce with spores and thoseof gymnosperms and angiosperms reproduce with seeds.
Eat grass, reproduce and avoid predators.
Grass flowers when it reaches a certain stage of growth and maturity. This is a natural process for grass plants to reproduce and spread their seeds.
It grows seed heads which contain seeds that drop off and produce new grass seedlings.
Eat, poop, reproduce, and die. Oh, and aparently hop in grass.
spores , mabe
Seagrasses are marine plants that look like grass. They live in shallow waters and reproduce by a process called submarine pollination.
a liver fluke is a small insect type which lives on the grass sheep then consume the grass taking in the bug the bug then lives in the body and travels into the liver where it multiples it does the by taking the goodness out of the liver it can the reproduce with the opposite sex
Yes, grass and fruit are living organisms. They are both examples of plants, which are living organisms that grow and reproduce. Grass is a type of plant that belongs to the grass family, while fruit is the reproductive structure of flowering plants.
Love grass refers to any of several annual or perennial grasses of the genus Eragrostis, which are cultivated for their delicate, spraylike flower-spikes. Love grass reproduces both sexually and asexually.
Many plants and flowers reproduce by pollination. Dull grass flowers are pollinated by flying insects like bees, and butterflies.
You don't need to feed sheep anything to keep them alive, but they need wheat to reproduce. They also eat grass after you shear them to restore their coat.
Grass obtains energy from the sun indirectly through photosynthesis. Photosynthesis involves converting sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water into glucose and oxygen. Grass uses the glucose as energy to grow and reproduce.