Several bamboo species are never known to set seed even when sporadically flowering has been reported . " Bambusa vulgaris ", " Bambusa balcooa " and " Dendrocalamus stocksii " are common examples of such bamboo.
22.
Several bamboo species are never known to set seed even when sporadically flowering has been reported . " Bambusa vulgaris ", " Bambusa balcooa " and " Dendrocalamus stocksii " are common examples of such bamboo.
23.
More and more landscapers are bringing the soft swish and sway of bamboo to landscapes by planting less invasive species known as " clumping bamboos . " Many of these are tropical but hedge bamboo ( Bambusa multiplex ), seems to do well.
24.
Several bamboo species are never known to set seed even when sporadically flowering has been reported . " Bambusa vulgaris ", " Bambusa balcooa ", and " Dendrocalamus stocksii " are common examples of such bamboo.
25.
Several bamboo species are never known to set seed even when sporadically flowering has been reported . " Bambusa vulgaris ", " Bambusa balcooa ", and " Dendrocalamus stocksii " are common examples of such bamboo.
26.
The family with the most species is the Poaceae which includes a huge variety of species, from the tropical bamboo " Bambusa arnhemica " to the ubiquitous spinifex that thrives in arid Australia from the genera " orchid in Australia.
27.
K . Schum . is the sole representative of " "'Oreobambos " "', a monotypic African genus of bamboo, most closely related to the large genus " Bambusa " from tropical Asia and America.
28.
Cuttings from the many species of the genus Bambusa _ essentially a grass with aspirations of becoming a tree _ were sent back to aristocratic gardeners, who quickly discovered that it not only added a note of fantasia to lakes and streams, but it also grew like a weed.
29.
"If it's a Bambusa, it's tropical and it's probably going to die no matter what you do, " said Michael Bartholomew, a horticulturist at Cornell Cooperative Extension in Albany, who is on the board of the American Bamboo Society.
30.
A 2000 molecular study places it as closely related to the similar Indonesian species " Gigantochloa atroviolacea ", from which it was separated in 1997; it may soon be placed in that genus . " Bambusa lako " can only be grown in climates that are mostly frost free.