WebGrass, rush or sedge? by David Mead Rushes and sedges are superficially similar to grasses. In this article I describe how to tell by brief inspection whether a plant is a true grass, a rush, or a sedge. I also discuss the meanings of the related terms reed, cane and bulrush, so that you can correctly use all these terms in your dictionary work. WebEmpowering people to take action. Learning and education. Nature for wellbeing. Combatting the climate and nature emergency. Combatting the climate and nature …
APPENDIX 11B PLANT SPECIES OBSERVED DURING THE 2013 …
Webbulrush, Any of the annual or perennial grasslike plants constituting the genus Scirpus, especially S. lacustris, in the sedge family, that bear solitary or much-clustered spikelets. … WebBulrush. Example of the bulrush genus Schoenoplectus. Bulrush is a vernacular name for several large wetland grass-like plants. The Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland recommends "bulrush" as an English … drewry ocean freight
Scirpus cyperinus (Woolgrass, Woolgrass Bulrush)
WebRM2D97805 – Cotton grass (Eriophorum sp) on the shores of Goleon lake, in the background, the Aiguilles d'Arves, Ecrins National Park, north of La Grave, ... RM2BX8MKM – Alpine bulrush Trichophorum alpinum, peat bog plants. WebMarsh Bulrush Even though Marsh bulrush (Scirpus cyperinus) isn't a grass, it looks enough like one to warrant the occasional reference as "woolgrass." It is a close relative of sedge, which... WebDraba sp. Whitlow-grass species n/a Epilobium sp. Fireweed species n/a Epilobium palustre Marsh willowherb Secure Equisetum arvense Common horsetail Secure Galium trifidum Small bedstraw Secure Hippuris vulgaris Common mare's-tail Secure Huperzia selago (Lycopodium selago) Fir clubmoss Secure Lycopodium annotinum Bristly clubmoss Secure drewry meaning