About
Education
Discuss
TraitBank
Sign In
Sign Up
Language
Deutsch
English
Español
français
italiano
Nederlands
Piemontèis
Português do Brasil
suomi
Türkçe
Čeština
Ελληνικά
македонски
Українська
العربية
简体中文
繁體中文
names in breadcrumbs
vernacular
scientific
About
Education
Discuss
TraitBank
Sign In
Sign Up
en
Deutsch
English
Español
français
italiano
Nederlands
Piemontèis
Português do Brasil
suomi
Türkçe
Čeština
Ελληνικά
македонски
Українська
العربية
简体中文
繁體中文
names in breadcrumbs
vernacular
scientific
Creatures
»
…
»
Plants
»
…
»
Dicotyledons
»
…
»
Sedges
»
…
Creatures
»
Cellular Organisms
»
Eukaryotes
»
Plants
»
Green Plants
»
Streptophyta
»
Embryophytes
»
Ferns
»
Seed Plants
»
Dicotyledons
»
Monocotyledons
»
Commelinids
»
Grasses
»
Sedges
»
Sedges
«
Georgia Bulrush
Scirpus georgianus R. M. Harper
collect
overview
data
media
articles
maps
names
grass growth type
show all
active growth period
after harvest regrowth rate
allelopathic effect
anaerobic soil tolerance
bloom period
calcareous soil tolerance
carbon-to-nitrogen ratio
commercial availability
drought tolerance
fire resistance
fire tolerance
flower color
foliage porosity summer
foliage porosity winter
foliage texture
frost free days
fruit or seed color
fruit/seed abundance
fruit/seed persistence
geographic distribution
germination requirements
grain type
grass growth type
growth rate
hedge tolerance
horticulture
human/livestock toxicity
leaf color
life cycle habit
life span
livestock bloat potential
low temperature tolerance
moisture use
native range includes
plant growth form
plant height
plant propagation method
planting density
precipitation tolerance
primary growth form
primary macronutrient requirements
resprout ability after clipping
salt tolerance
seed period begin
seed period end
seed spread rate
seedling survival
shade tolerance
shape
shedability
soil depth
soil ph
soil requirements
vegetative spread rate
USDA Plants data
show all
USDA Plants data
grass growth type
USDA Plants data
no
URI:
http://eol.org/schema/terms/no
Definition:
This statement is false; the answer to this question is no.
show all records