Magnoliophyta is the phylum that kudzu is in. It is the phylum of magnolia-like flowering plants. The weedy species in the Pueraria genus therefore manages a most ironic membership in the beloved, beneficial bean, legume and pea family Fabaceae.
The Latin scientific name for Kudzu, or the kudzu vine, is Pueraria lobata or Pueraria thunbergiana.See the related link(s) listed below for more information:
Phylum Annelida Phylum Arthropoda Phylum Mollusca Phylum Echinodermata Phylum Chordata
Leeches belong to the phylum Annelida.
PHYLUM: Chordata SUB-PHYLUM: Vertebrata
Phylum Aschelminthes
Angiospermae is the phylum of kudzu [Pueraria lobata]. The 'foot-a-night' or 'mile-a-minute' vine indeed is a flowering plant. It's a member of the Fabaceae family of nitrogen-fixing plants. Such plants can be called natural fertilizers, because they don't deplete the soil of such necessary nutrients as nitrogen.
Magnoliophyta is the classification division that includes kudzu. Kudzu numbers among the species in the genus Pueraria. Taxonomists relegate that genus to membership in the tribe Phaseoleae, the subfamily Faboideae, the family Fabaceae and the order Fabales within the flowering plant phylum, Magnoliophyta.
isoprene is in a kudzu cell
what eats kudzu? Well the platasid eats the kudzu that is its natural habitat but in the U.S. bunnies and cows eat it
Kudzu can be found in Japan and Asia.
Kudzu Wish was created in 1998.
It is the Chinese medicinal use of kudzu in treating alcoholism , however, that is the focus of many studies on kudzu.
do u know what are the trade off of a kudzu
kudzu is a helpful plant
Under the Kudzu was created on 1993-07-27.
Yes, but kudzu its also used for erosion control and medical reasons.
Yes, but kudzu its also used for erosion control and medical reasons.