Botanical Name
:
Dioscorea
esculenta Lour
Family :
Dioscoreaceae - Yam family
Genus :
Dioscorea L. - yam
Species:
Dioscorea esculenta (Lour.) Burkill - lesser yam
Kingdom :
Plantae
- Plants
Subkingdom
: Tracheobionta -Vascular plants
Superdivision:
Spermatophyta -
Seed plants
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Dioscorea
esculenta Lour
Family :
Dioscoreaceae - Yam family
Genus :
Dioscorea L. - yam
Species:
Dioscorea esculenta (Lour.) Burkill - lesser yam
Kingdom :
Plantae
- Plants
Subkingdom
: Tracheobionta -Vascular plants
Superdivision:
Spermatophyta -
Seed plants
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
esculenta Lour
Family :
Dioscoreaceae - Yam family
Genus :
Dioscorea L. - yam
Species:
Dioscorea esculenta (Lour.) Burkill - lesser yam
Kingdom :
Plantae
- Plants
Subkingdom
: Tracheobionta -Vascular plants
Superdivision:
Spermatophyta -
Seed plants
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Family :
Dioscoreaceae - Yam family
Genus :
Dioscorea L. - yam
Species:
Dioscorea esculenta (Lour.) Burkill - lesser yam
Kingdom :
Plantae
- Plants
Subkingdom
: Tracheobionta -Vascular plants
Superdivision:
Spermatophyta -
Seed plants
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Dioscoreaceae - Yam family
Genus :
Dioscorea L. - yam
Species:
Dioscorea esculenta (Lour.) Burkill - lesser yam
Kingdom :
Plantae
- Plants
Subkingdom
: Tracheobionta -Vascular plants
Superdivision:
Spermatophyta -
Seed plants
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Genus :
Dioscorea L. - yam
Species:
Dioscorea esculenta (Lour.) Burkill - lesser yam
Kingdom :
Plantae
- Plants
Subkingdom
: Tracheobionta -Vascular plants
Superdivision:
Spermatophyta -
Seed plants
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Dioscorea L. - yam
Species:
Dioscorea esculenta (Lour.) Burkill - lesser yam
Kingdom :
Plantae
- Plants
Subkingdom
: Tracheobionta -Vascular plants
Superdivision:
Spermatophyta -
Seed plants
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Species:
Dioscorea esculenta (Lour.) Burkill - lesser yam
Kingdom :
Plantae
- Plants
Subkingdom
: Tracheobionta -Vascular plants
Superdivision:
Spermatophyta -
Seed plants
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Kingdom :
Plantae
- Plants
Subkingdom
: Tracheobionta -Vascular plants
Superdivision:
Spermatophyta -
Seed plants
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
- Plants
Subkingdom
: Tracheobionta -Vascular plants
Superdivision:
Spermatophyta -
Seed plants
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Subkingdom
: Tracheobionta -Vascular plants
Superdivision:
Spermatophyta -
Seed plants
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Superdivision:
Spermatophyta -
Seed plants
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Seed plants
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Division :
Magnoliophyta -
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Flowering plants
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Class :
Liliopsida - Monocotyledons
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Subclass:
Liliidae
Other Scientific Names
: Oneus esculentus Lour. ,Discorea papillaris Blanco ,Discorea tugui Blanco ,Discorea sativa Blanco ,Discorea fasciculata Roxb. ,Discorea tiliaefolia Kunth ,Discorea aculeata Naves
Common Names
:Aneg (Ibn.),Boga (Ilk.),Dukai (Iv.), Tuñgo (Tag.),Asiatic yam (Engl.) ,aLesser yam
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
(Engl.),Kamiging (Bik.),Luttu (Ibn.),Toñgo (Tag.),Tugi (Tag., Ilk.)
Habitat :
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Native of SE Indochina, and widespread in the East, recently introduced to W Africa and found under cultivation around the coast, particularly from
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
Ivory Coast
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
to Nigeria.The plant requires a somewhat seasonal climate. In thickets and secondary forests at low altitudes.Cultivated, but not as extensively as ubi.
Description:
Slender, slightly hairy vine, reaching a height of several meters. The tubers are 15-20 cm long. Leaves are simple, suborbicular to reniform, 6-12 cms. apiculate, the base 11- to 15-nervbed, prominently heart-shaped, with rounded lobes. Spikes are slender, axillary, pubescent, up to 50 cm long. Flowers are green, about 4 mm long.
A spiny climber to 12 m high twining left-handed, with numerous shallow-rooted tubers, It is a 6-10 months crop with short dormancy period. The tubers are small and are found in clusters of some 5 to 20 slightly below the soil surface. Unselected forms produce spiny roots lying above the tubers as a protection. Selection has eliminated some or all of the spininess in certain cultivars. Yield is high and the tubers are palatable and nutritious. Tubers grown in Ivory Coast have been recorded producing 83% starch and 12% protein. Many races in Asia are slightly sweet. The tubers do not store well. They are quick to sprout if left in the ground and are easily damaged in harvesting. Six months storage is said to be possible of sound roots in a dry well-ventilated store. They are not suitable for transport to distant markets, nor for turning into fufu. There appears to be scope for growing the plant under mechanical cultivation.
corn is a flowering monocotyledonous plant
A flowering shrub. This large evergreen grows in acidic soils
Plant stems support the rest of the plant.
Plant cell
it is land and water plant.... Weird Right ?? I can't help
The cast of Maybe Art - 2011 includes: Craze as himself Swaze as himself Tugi Balog as himself
1 syllable:ant, aunt, bandt, brandt, brant, cant, can't, chant, dant, fant, gant, gantt, grandt, grant, jandt, kandt, kant, landt, lant, mandt, pant, plant, plante, quant, rant, sandt, sant, scant, schrandt, slant, stant, tant, trant, yant, zandt, zant2 syllables:air plant, bean plant, beef plant, block grant, bog plant, burn plant, chard plant, christ plant, cress plant, decant, enchant, gas plant, gum plant, ice plant, implant, incant, labant, land grant, lead plant, levant, marsh plant, mole plant, moth plant, pea plant, pie plant, pylant, recant, replant, rock plant, rouge plant, seed plant, shame plant, sheep plant, slave ant, snake plant, snow plant, stone plant, sun plant, supplant, swamp plant, vansandt, vanzandt, wax plant, white ant, wood ant, yam plant3 syllables:action plant, anise plant, army ant, bedding plant, beefsteak plant, breast implant, bulbous plant, bulldog ant, chimney plant, compass plant, cotton plant, cruel plant, desert plant, driver ant, fire ant, friendship plant, garden plant, heating plant, honey plant, humble plant, lentil plant, leopard plant, lipstick plant, lobster plant, maiden aunt, money plant, okra plant, onion plant, oyster plant, packing plant, pebble plant, pharaoh ant, pitcher plant, poker plant, power plant, radish plant, rhubarb plant, roast beef plant, rubber plant, shell bean plant, slipper plant, soybean plant, spider plant, spinach plant, sweet corn plant, taro plant, tortoise plant, turnip plant, velvet plant, water plant, woody plant4 syllables:amazon ant, aquatic plant, artichoke plant, assembly plant, butterfly plant, carpenter ant, castor bean plant, century plant, chinese silk plant, common bean plant, composite plant, dental implant, disposal plant, evergreen plant, flamingo plant, flowering plant, garden pea plant, head cabbage plant, herbaceous plant, hot water plant, icicle plant, immanuel kant, indigo plant, ivory plant, lima bean plant, little black ant, penile implant, piggyback plant, pineapple plant, poisonous plant, pyramid plant, sensitive plant, sweet pepper plant, tabasco plant, telegraph plant, tomato plant, ulysses grant, umbrella plant, vascular plant, winter squash plant5 syllables:artillery plant, caricature plant, carnivorous plant, chinese lantern plant, common pitcher plant, coriander plant, cultivated plant, deciduous plant, electrical plant, golden honey plant, gregorian chant, hooded pitcher plant, industrial plant, madia oil plant, monocarpic plant, obedience plant, obedient plant, parasitic plant, poison arrow plant, purple velvet plant, recycling plant, resurrection plant, royal velvet plant, spanish oyster plant, stone mimicry plant, sweet unicorn plant, ulysses s grant, water chestnut plant, wild sensitive plant, yellow pitcher plant6 syllables:australian pitcher plant, common unicorn plant, manufacturing plant, mexican fire plant, mistletoe rubber plant, rocky mountain bee plant, sewage disposal plant, tropical pitcher plant7 syllables:california pitcher plant
It was a land plant.
A water plant
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it is a plant that reproduces
The root of the plant delivers nutrients, food for the plant, and water to help the plant to survive.
No,it is not. The angsana plant does not grows in the water so therefore,the angsana plant is not an aquatic plant.
a nectaring plant is a plant that produces nectar.
Plant cells are literally everywhere on a plant. Plants are a collection of plant cells and without them, a plant wouldn't be a plant. Plant cells are needed everywhere on the plant in order for the plant to survive and reproduce.
A plant with seeds is a flowering plant and is called an angiosperm.
It is not a plant. It is a organelle of plant cells.