The ashes after the fire would contain a lot of nutrients so the grass would take the nutrients and grow quickley.
No the digestive tract will destroy the grass so that it will not grow. It would have to be the roots of the grass for it to grow anyway.
It is the green things that grow out of the ground in parks and usually in yards and garden. A lawn is the same as grass. Like, you hear people saying that they 'mowed the lawn'. It is a plant but lots of it grows out of the ground.
I would use the grass deck on the electric. The main thing you want to do is keep away fire from grass types. Fire against fire.
Not really, no. It would only grow as an annual in Colorado, not a perennial. Bermuda is a C4 grass, and you need C3 grasses to grow as perennials in that state.
The opposite of grass would typically be considered as something like pavement or concrete.
Of course it will, how else would we grow anything in British Columbia.
grass grow in a bunch
no the earth would not look nice because the elephants eat the grass and the grass will grow back.
The grass would presumably catch on fire, however, if the bottle was sealed, the fire would eventually burn out due to the lack of oxygen required to continue combustion.
the grass has a lot of roots. The grasses roots grow back fast after a fire.
Yes, grass does grow in the arctic. Grass lives just about everywhere!
Grasses are plants that grow from their bases, that is why mowing your lawn does not hurt the plant. When a fire sweeps across a grassland, it burns off all the grass but leaves the root system and growing crown unharmed (because they are below the fire in the soil). Within a few days new grass leaves sprout form the root crown and the grass recovers. Other species of plant grow from their tips (the growing shoot) and a fire damages this growing tip (which is above ground).