Asked by bob

Plants in grasslands would not benefit from adaptations that protect against grazing.


Please select the best answer from the choices provided

True or false

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
False.

Plants in grasslands frequently benefit from grazing-resistant or grazing-tolerant adaptations (basal meristems, rapid regrowth, stolons/rhizomes, tough or silica-rich leaves, chemical defenses) because grazing by large herbivores is common and selection favors traits that reduce damage or allow quick recovery.