Rainwater does not contain certain minerals and salts, which tap water does. and these can prevent the plant from growing properly.
when the plant has a flower , small tender potatoes are ready, when the plant starts to wilt and turn brown, potatoes are ready under the ground!
No, Potatoes are unrelated to ferns. Ferns do not bear flowers, Potatoes do.
The chloroplast starts photosynthesis, which helps the plant to thrive.
Minerals in the soil are the food source of the plant.
Depends on the plant. Most plant you are familiar with would not thrive near an ocean with all the salt in the surrounding air.
It depends on the plant, assuming we are not talking about an extreme of alkalinity. Neutral is pH 7 Above that is alkaline, below it is acidic. Potatoes planted in alkaline soil will suffer - potatoes like, and thrive in, slightly acidic soil. Cabbage and broccoli love slightly alkaline soil. So it depends on what "plant" you are talking about.
rainwater
Potatoes sense that the sun is lower in the sky in fall and this is when the plant shifts from leaf growth to root growth. Putting potatoes out into a frost free source of light before planting is called chitting.
tum log pagal
because i also do not now
yes, because it is also water
potatoes are a plant. they are considered a starchy food.
Potatoes have "eyes" that produce new potatoes. The person growing them cut the potato with the eye and plant them.
It is a common misconception that potatoes are roots. They are actually tubers, and thus potatoes are a part of the potato plant. They are not the roots of any plant.
Botanically, yes, they are a vegetative plant organ. Potatoes are the tuber (root) of a fruit bearing plant. But nutritionally potatoes are considered a starch/carbohydrate and not vegetables.
APRIL
A potatoes plant stored starch