Examples of tuber in the following topics:
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Stem Modifications
- Tubers are modified stems that may store starch, as seen in the potato.
- Tubers arise as swollen ends of stolons, and contain many adventitious or unusual buds (familiar to us as the "eyes" on potatoes).
- Shown are (a) ginger (Zingiber officinale) rhizomes, (b) a carrion flower (Amorphophallus titanum) corm (c) Rhodes grass (Chloris gayana) stolons, (d) strawberry (Fragaria ananassa) runners, (e) potato (Solanum tuberosum) tubers, and (f) red onion (Allium) bulbs.
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Asexual Reproduction in Plants
- A potato is a stem tuber, while parsnip propagates from a taproot.
- (d) Potato plants form fleshy stem tubers.
- Each eye in the stem tuber can give rise to a new plant.
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Root Modifications
- Storage roots (for example, taproots and tuberous roots) are modified for food storage.
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Transportation of Photosynthates in the Phloem
- Seeds, tubers, and bulbs can be either a source or a sink, depending on the plant's stage of development and the season.
- They are also directed to tubers for storage.
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Prions and Viroids
- These potatoes have been infected by the potato spindle tuber viroid (PSTV).