Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
There is Bracken, Bramble and Common Bent.
Common bent (Agrostis capillaris)
Common Bent (Agrostris capillaris)
Where there are drier areas at the edge of the water, Purple Moor-grass, Common Bent, Tufted Hair-grass and various rushes flourish.
The dominant grasses are Common Bent, Red Fescue, Crested Dog's-tail and Yorkshire Fog.
Agrostis capillaris (Common Bent, Colonial bent, Browntop) is a rhizomatous and stoloniferous perennial in the grass family (Poaceae).
The Tunnel Cave is closed from May to October each year so that a colony of Common Bent Wing Bats, which hibernate there, are left undisturbed.
Several invasive species have been reported in the Big Butte Creek watershed, such as Kentucky Bluegrass, Common Bent, Drooping Brome, and Redtop.
The dominant grass species are False Oat-grass, Arrhenatherum elatius, and Common Bent, Agrostis capillaris, but a variety of herbs are present, including extensive patches dominated by three orchids, Northern Marsh, Dactylorhiza purpurella, Common Spotted, D. fuchsii, and Early Purple, Orchis mascula.
Colonial Bent is fairly easy to grow from seeds and fertilization of the lawn is not as intense.
Colonial bent grows in moist grasslands and open meadows, and can also be found in agricultural areas, roadsides, and invading disturbed areas.
The two engines are commonly called the "Browntop" and "Blacktop" due to the color of their valve covers.
Agrostis capillaris (Common Bent, Colonial bent, Browntop) is a rhizomatous and stoloniferous perennial in the grass family (Poaceae).
The improvements in the "blacktop" engine included lighter rods, domed pistons for slightly higher compression, and an electric advance distributor (the "browntop" came with a vacuum advance distributor).
In the Waikato the original English grasses used by earlier settlers - browntop, fescue and Yorkshire Fog - have been replaced with higher producing Italian ryegrass and nitrogen-fixing white clover.
Linksland is typically characterized by dunes, an undulating surface, and a sandy soil unsuitable for arable farming but which readily supports various indigenous browntop bents and red fescue grasses, that give the firm turf associated with links courses and the 'running 'game.
Agrostis capillaris (I)
Succession from Heather Moorland to Birch Woodland: II Growth and Competition Between Vaccinium Myrtillus, Deschampsia Flexuosa and Agrostis Capillaris (with A. J. Hester and J. Miles, Journal of Ecology, 1991)