well, yes you can but like many other plants grown in that way you need to take a little time to care for it. If done properly there should be a good chance of it growing its own roots under the right conditions. I hope this helps.
actually it can be both . take bamboo for example it has prop roots but it is not woody. but then a banyan tree is woody but is having prop roots.so i guess the answer is it can be both!Edited answer:Prop roots come out from a woody plant only, in case of bamboo only stilt roots are seen not prop roots.
Roots and leaves are equally important to a plant. Without either one, it dies.
Depends what kind of plant it is
how can the roots cell of a plant survive without having chloroplast
Bamboo plants do not produce seeds. They grow in clumps and to reproduce it simply grows off the root of another bamboo plant. I have lived in a tropical country with tons of bamboo so I know. Once I stuck a piece of bamboo in my yard and it grew although it had no roots on it (just thought it was interesting).
Twisting bamboo gets water and or nutrients through it's leaves and roots.
actually it can be both . take bamboo for example it has prop roots but it is not woody. but then a banyan tree is woody but is having prop roots.so i guess the answer is it can be both!Edited answer:Prop roots come out from a woody plant only, in case of bamboo only stilt roots are seen not prop roots.
Bamboo is Important Because it is What Pandas Eat And Without Bamboo there Wouldn't Be Pandas And Without Pandas the Whole Life Cycle Would Get Off! :) -Starduskk! (:
Yes, lucky bamboo is not an aquatic plant and over time its roots will rot and die. It is best to plant it in soil with well drainage hole(s).
yes, my bamboo plant does.
Bamboo is a type of plant.
Roots and leaves are equally important to a plant. Without either one, it dies.
Rhizomys species construct extensive burrow systems among roots of dense bamboo stands, where they feed primarily on bamboo roots.
No!
bamboo is flowering plant
Bamboo is a non-flowering plant
Depends what kind of plant it is