caribou, moose, ect.
small animals
A YAK eats grass.
An Argali eats grasses, herbs, and sedges because of the surroundings of this mammal.
Its CARIBOU not caribuo they eat leaves of willows, sedges, flowering tundra plants, and mushrooms
Bighorns are herbivores, so they primarily eat herbaceous plant matter like grasses and sedges that they can find on the mountain sides.
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.
yes
No.
The Northern Hairy-nosed Wombat (aka Queensland Hairy-nosed Wombat, Yaminon) eats mostly native grasses. The Common Wombat eats mostly native grasses, sedges, rushes, shrub and tree roots. The Southern Hairy-nosed Wombat eats mostly young shoots of native grasses.
A hedge is yes
Sedges and grasses are both types of plants, but they have some key differences. One main difference is their stems: sedges have triangular stems, while grasses have round stems. Additionally, sedges typically have solid stems, while grasses have hollow stems. Another difference is in their reproductive structures: sedges have flowers with separate male and female parts, while grasses have flowers with both male and female parts on the same plant.