Find the word definition

Crossword clues for cynodon

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Cynodon

Cynodon \Cynodon\ n. a genus of creeping perennial grasses of tropical and southern Africa.

Syn: genus Cynodon.

Wikipedia
Cynodon

Cynodon is a genus of plants in the grass family. It is native to warm temperate to tropical regions of the Old World, as well as being cultivated and naturalized in the New World and on many oceanic islands.

The genus name comes from Greek words meaning "Dog-tooth". The genus as a whole as well as its species are commonly known as Bermuda Grass or Dog's Tooth Grass.

Species
  1. Cynodon aethiopicus - Africa; introduced in South Africa, Queensland, Hawaii, Texas
  2. Cynodon barberi - India, Sri Lanka
  3. Cynodon coursii - Madagascar
  4. Cynodon dactylon - Old World; introduced in New World and on various islands
  5. Cynodon incompletus - southern Africa; introduced in Australia, Argentina
  6. Cynodon × magennisii - Limpopo, Gauteng, Mpumalanga; introduced in Texas, Alabama
  7. Cynodon nlemfuensis - Africa from Ethiopia to Zimbabwe; introduced in South Africa, West Africa, Saudi Arabia, Philippines, Texas, Florida, Mesoamerica, northern South America, various islands
  8. Cynodon plectostachyus - Chad, East Africa; introduced in Madagascar, Bangladesh, Mexico, West Indies, Paraguay, northeastern Argentina, Texas, California
  9. Cynodon radiatus - China, Indian Subcontinent, Southeast Asia, Madagascar; introduced in Australia, New Guinea
  10. Cynodon transvaalensis - South Africa, Lesotho; introduced in other parts of Africa plus in scattered locales in Iran, Australia, and the Americas
formerly included

several species now considered better suited to other genera: Arundo Bouteloua Brachyachne Chloris Cortaderia Ctenium Digitaria Diplachne Eleusine Enteropogon Eragrostis Eustachys Gynerium Leptochloa Molinia Muhlenbergia Phragmites Poa Spartina Tridens Trigonochloa

Cynodon (fish)

Cynodon is a genus of dogtooth characins from tropical South America.

Usage examples of "cynodon".

It was a rapid-fire flow of Latin: Cynodon dactylon, Eleusine indica, Trifolium repens.