potato
Sweet potatoes
Begonia
Cyclamen
potato chines lantern plant
cassava,sweet potato
Begonias, potatoes, yams, sweet potatoes, dahlias, and cassavas are tubers.
tubers, corms and prickles (like a rose has)
Potatoes, yams, and dahlias are examples of organisms that reproduce by tubers. These tubers are specialized underground stems that store nutrients and can develop into new plants when planted in the soil.
Root Tubers are different than Stem Tubers. Root Tubers include: Dahlias, Sweet Potatoes (Kumara - Ipomaea battatas), Cassava and Jerusalem Artichoke (Helianthus tuberosus) Root Tubers are modified roots so do not have "eyes" (buds) like a Potato which is a. . . .Stem Tubers include: Potatoes, New Zealand Yam or Oca (Oxalis tuberosa), Tuberous Begonias, Cyclamen, and Mignonette Vine (Anredera cordifolia) and they are modified stems so do have "eyes" (buds) which are axillary (side) buds and can become vegetative shoots.Stem Tubers also generally go green (like a spud) if left in the light but Root Tubers generally don't (no chloroplasts in modified root.)
Tubers are various types of modified plant structures that are enlarged to store nutrients. They are used by plants to overwinter and regrow the next year and as a means of asexual reproduction. Two different groups of tubers are: stem tubers, and root tubers
tubers
Swollen underground roots are called tubers. They are structures used by plants to store nutrients and energy for growth and reproduction. Examples of tubers include potatoes and sweet potatoes.
Carrots are roots, not tubers.
Potatoes are tubers, not seeds.
I have three types of tubers in my garden.