Bulbs are underground buds with the stem reduced to a small knob on which fleshy storage leaves are clustered (e.g. dry onions).
Tubers are fleshy underground stems modified to store starch (e.g. white, or Irish, potatoes). The "eyes" are the nodes with an axillary bud in each (the peel is periderm tissue). Sweet potatoes are roots.
Rhizomes are horizontal underground stems with nodes, internodes, dry scale leaves, and adventitious roots (e.g. fresh ginger "roots" sold in grocery stores are rhizomes). Canna lilies, iris, and many grasses have rhizomes with which they are propagated.
Corms are upright underground fleshy stems covered by leaves reduced to dry, covering scales (e.g. gladiolus and crocus). Note that corms store reserve food in stem tissue, and bulbs in leaf tissue.
Thorns are woody, sharply pointed branch stems (e.g. honey locust).
Spines are small, unbranched, sharp outgrowths of leaf tissue in which the parenchyma is replaced by sclerenchyma (e.g. cactus).
Prickles are small pointed outgrowths from the epidermis or cortex of the stem (e.g. rose and raspberry).
Cladophylls are flattened main stems that resemble leaves (e.g. butcher's-broom, greenbrier, and some orchids). Edible asparagus shoots left to grow produce many small fern-like cladophylls.
Stipules are paired scales, glands, or leaf-like structures at the base of the petiole formed from leaf or stem tissue (e.g. black locust).
Bracts are modified leaves at the base of flowers or flower stalks. Some are highly-colored and resemble petals (e.g. the red "petals" of poinsettia are bracts surrounding the small, yellow flowers).
Tendrils can be exclusively leaf tissue (e.g. pea leaflets, nasturtium petioles, or cucumber leaves that twine and aid in supporting the shoots) or they can be modified special shoots with thin, modified stems (e.g. morning glories, grapes, and Boston ivy).
Stolons, sometimes called runners, are thin, above-ground, horizontal stems of indeterminate growth and long internodes that grow out from a parent plant and produce young plants at their tips (e.g. strawberry plants, and a host of the most pernicious garden weeds).
bulbs
corms
rhizomes
tubers
stolens
thorns
tendrils
cladphylls
The different types of tea leafs have different pH . the tea which we drink every early morning actually acidic in nature which has the pH around 6-6.6.
members of the lily family have 6 stamen
The names of different types of volcanoes are: 1.Cinder, 2. Composite, 3.Shield, 4.Lava, 5.Plugs, and 6.Maars.
there are 6 cells its Minor hadn't nerving Alnilam's her eta and sizing
Animals have many different kinds. The number of blood types vary throughout each different species. For example, cats have 3, cows have about 800 and dogs have 13 (6-8 of which are the major ones). This is why blood transfusions cannot be made to different species. The donors blood will react to the patients blood because their blood types are not the same.
i think there are 6...
like 6 or something
polyurethane
6*3*2=36 different types
You can buy 6 stems for about $35.
6
6 in different languages
The different types of tea leafs have different pH . the tea which we drink every early morning actually acidic in nature which has the pH around 6-6.6.
Yes, there are 6 different types of flamingos, although they all belong to the same genus. They are:Greater flamingoLesser flamingoChilean flamingoJames's flamingoAmerican flamingoAndean flamingo
There are six different types of directory, namely: 1. Business 2. Residential 3. Internal 4, Street 5. Institutional 6. General
there are two types of sloth wich are1. 2toed sloth2. 3toed sloth
There are 6 different types CNS: astrocytes, microglia, ependymal, and oligodendrocytes, PNS: satellite cells, and schwann cells