Potato is classed as a root crop, Ginger is a semi-root, and onion is a bulb.
Ginger is open to interpretation, so I would say it is a fibrous root, and enjoy my home-brew ginger beer!
Garlic has a fibrous root system, consisting of many fine roots that spread out from the base of the plant. This type of root system is well suited for anchoring the plant in the soil and absorbing nutrients efficiently.
An onion has a fibrous root system. The roots of an onion plant are spread out in a network of thin, hair-like structures which help in absorbing water and nutrients from the soil.
You can eat the green tops as well as the white bulbs of the spring onion plant. Both parts are commonly used in cooking for their mild onion flavor.
No, onions are not an example of plants with modified roots. Onions have a bulb which is a modified stem, not modified roots. Examples of plants with modified roots include carrot and radish.
No.You plant the bulb of the onion underground and it grows and when it is ready the onion will be above the ground, but the roots will still be underneath.
Yes,new plants grow from the roots of potato, sweet potato, ginger and turmeric.
No, it is a both a root and a type of tuber that has tap roots( the long thin strands that anchor plants in the ground) Answer A potato is a tuber, the roots of a potato plant are fibrous, the tubers grow on the roots.
Yes, ginger roots are slightly fibrous.
Daylilies, potatoes, sweet potatoes, radishes, turnips, and carrots have tuberous roots.
As my mom always did she would quarter up potatos and let them sprout ( usually in a dark area) then plant them 3 inches under the soil. Which needs to be loose. Do not over water, causes then to rot..
Onion roots emerge from the base of the condensed stem.
rutabaga turnip burdock carrot radish parsnip parsley root salsify ginger sweet potato yam beetroot
onion, ginger, and tomatoes that is all I know.
Potatoes, garlic and onion are stems that grow underground which we know best. Yam and ginger are also examples of stems that grow underground. Rhizome, tuber, bulb and corm are other examples of underground stems that are not known by many people.
The potato reproduces by underground stems or roots (I think)
potatoes and carrots and beets and radishes
Yes. However technically "root ginger" is a rhizome, not a root.