Bulb- onion, garlic, spring onion.
Root - carrot, turnip,
Any plant that is grown for food has roots underground, but vegetable that have roots that are eaten are potatoes, carrots, radishes, etc.
The part of the potato plant we eat is called the tuber, which is actually an enlarged underground stem.
Carrot, sweet potato and turnip
potato is plant that grows on ground, the actual piece you eat is underground
It is indeed. Specifically, it is a plant.
Potatoes store their starch in their underground tubers, which are swollen underground stems. Starch is the primary energy reserve of the plant that is stored in these tubers to support growth and development.
It gets its roots from the underground stem of its parent plant.
No, we just discussed this in our bio class its actually a tuberous root, not to be confused with the term tuber. Potatoes on the other hand are stems, but there is a difference.
Potatoes are considered stems and not roots, because they are the part of the stem of the plant that grows underground, it's the part of the stem that thickens and accumulate starch.
Potatoes are a tuber, which grows underground, and are the only edible part of the potato plant.
the potato A potato is a tuber; a type of underground storage organ that the plant can use to store energy in the form of starch which is used as fuel while the above-ground portion of the plant is growing during the growing season. Tubers are not roots (potato eyes are the roots) and are not fruits (potato plant fruits are found on the above-ground portion.)
Tuber is the modified organ of the plant potato.