Yes
If there are roots on the bunch you remove
Yes it has. to absorb water at the maximum,
Yes, milkweed has invasive roots. The underground anchor of the plant in question (Asclepias) is a spreading system of rhizomes. It thereby permits milkweed to send roots in outward and upward directions.
Yucca - Yucca glauca - make a lovely, unusual addition to gardens and landscapes, however, their roots make a wonderful natural ingredient in shampoo, which leaves hair glossy.
Aztecs used the roots of the yucca plant for soap.
No.
Fibrous.
It depends how close it is and how big it is.
the yucca moth benefits with the yucca plant so the yucca moth can get food from the yucca plant .
tribes eat a variety of bugs and insects also wild boar and pig they also eat leaves and sugar barley They also eat Yucca Yucca plants are grinded up to make a meal called farina. As yucca grows, it is cultivated into a bush-like plant, whose fibrous root is the edible part. Yucca, also known as cassava, is a white, starchy tropical vegetable that was originally grown by indigenous people. These people used yucca as a dietary staple, typically milling the yucca into flour or making a paste from it. Knowing when to harvest the yucca plant is a very important thing. If it is harvested too late, damages to the root occur, such as rotting roots or the roots turning into a wood-like state. Methods for cooking yucca can be: Boiling it then covering it with onions and garlic then soaked with butter or vegetable oil, Frying the yucca in canola oil until its golden then lightly shake garlic salt on top of it, Adding it along with potatoes and other vegetables into beef-based-soups.
Yucca is the English word for yucca.