potato
examples of plants with modified roots.....
Carrot, radish, potato, garlic ect.
Radish. Pear and apple are both fruit that grow on tree's potato and radish are both vegetables and both grow underground in soil.
No, a radish is not considered an underground stem. It is considered a type of root just like carrots and sweet potatoes.
Carrot, radish, turnip & sweet potato etc.
Carrot, parsnip, radish, beetroot, swede, turnip, mangel wurzel, yam, potato, sweet potato...
The carrot, radish, onion and sugar beet have stems that are above ground and the roots and edible tuber/bulb is underground. The stem is green and the carrot is orange; the beet is red, the onion is white/red; the radish is red/white.
No, a radish is not considered an underground stem. It is considered a type of root just like carrots and sweet potatoes.
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 Although carrot and radish both store food in their tap roots, they belong to different families of flowering plants. Carrot belongs to Lamiaceae and radish belongs to Brassicaceae.
Bulbs are the most obvious group of plants, but certain individual plants such as Potato's and carrots do as well.Actually most carbohydrate (energy) filled veggies, like the potatoes are tubers. a modified stem that stays underground - not a root!Plants store extra energy as starch, which can come in a wide range of forms. Potato plants store them in big underground tubers that we know as the edible vegetable, as do carrots, parsnips, turnips, etc. Apples, tomatoes, grapes and oranges are all other examples of energy storage sites. You may realise that these often correlate with the plant's seed location/vessel, for obvious reasons.The plants are carrots and potatoes .
any root vegetable would be correct here carrot, beet, radish etc.