Part 3:
Plant Classification
Characteristics of Grasses
Grasses are flowering plants belonging to the family Poaceae,
which contains over 6,000 species. Grasses are one of the most
important types of plants in the world since they supply most of
the world’s food (such as corn, rice, oats, rye, sorghum,
wheat, barely).
Grasses have many uses including:
- Soil conservation and protection because they have thick,
fibrous root systems that hold soil well.
- Landscaping and golf courses because some have a sod-forming
growth pattern
- Rangeland forage because they are found in a wide range of
areas and can provide quality, palatable nutrition for grazing
animals
Distribution of particular grasses in particular environments
is often determined by the area’s type of soil, available
moisture, temperature, exposure, and altitude.
Here is some specific information about grass anatomy:
- Grasses have fibrous roots, meaning they
are made up of many long, slender, branched roots all about the
same diameter. Most of the root is found in the top 12 inches
of soil. This characteristic makes grasses good for holding soil
together.
- The stem of grass is also called the culm.
They are usually hollow except at the nodes, also known as joints
in grasses. Grasses having an only one tuft or clump with many
stems growing from the clump are called bunchgrasses. Grasses
having rhizomes or stolons tend to cover the ground in a dense
stand and are called sod forming or mat forming grasses.
- Grass leaves have parallel venation. The
sheath wraps around the stem and the blades protrude from the
stem. The function of the leaf is to manufacture food through
photosynthesis and to transfer this food to other parts of the
plant.
- Grass flowers or spikelets are found in groups
called an inflorescence, or seedhead. Flowers are usually inconspicuous.
There is great variety in the arrangement of spikelets on an inflorescence,
and this characteristic is used to help identify species of grasses.
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