The most common examples are onions, garlics, tulips and crocus.
yes some plants grow from bulbs
No, not all plants grow from seeds. Some plants can be propagated through methods like cuttings, division, or grafting.
Bulbs, are used to act as current regulators in some circuits. If you are talking about bulbs that plants grow from, they do not belong in literature discussions, do they?
Seeds are a way that some plants reproduce. Those that do not use seeds for reproduction, do not need seeds. <><> They have other means of reproduction. Strawberry plants send out runners, which will root and form new plants. Potato plants grow potatoes, which sprout into new plants. Garlic and daffodils grow bulbs, which sprout new plants.
Plants grow from bulbs as a form of storage organ to store nutrients for growth and reproduction. Bulb plants originated from various regions around the world, such as tulips from Turkey, daffodils from Spain, and garlic from Central Asia.
Some plants have bulbs as they store their complete life cycle in an underground storage structure.
Many do from Lilies , tulips, daffodils, crocus, the number is almost endless when you also consider that there are so many varieties of each type. The flower in the spring summer fall and some even near winter.
Some plants are Tulips Bulbs
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Orchids, Bromeliads, moss, roots, and wooden vines. Even though there are some plants growing in trees many also grow in the understory and some that grow in the water.
Onions, Garlic.
Bulbs reproduce primarily through a process called vegetative propagation. As the parent bulb grows, it can produce offsets or "daughter bulbs" that develop around the base. These offsets can be separated and planted to grow new plants. Additionally, some bulbs can also reproduce by producing seeds, but this method is less common and takes longer to develop into new plants.