Honey suckle and brides vail comes to mind.
No. A tulip produces a bulb which produces a seed pod.
NO!! the bulb is what starts the new amaryllis flower is you take off the bulb youll never have another flower.
The bulb produces the light.
A tulip develops from a bulb planted in the soil. The bulb grows roots first, followed by a shoot that emerges from the soil. This shoot develops into a stem, which produces leaves and eventually a flower bud that blooms into a tulip flower.
No, you cannot change the color of an amaryllis flower while it is still in bulb form. The flower's color is determined genetically and will only become apparent once the bulb blossoms into a flower.
the NiteRider HID Firestorm produces 500 Lumens its bulb equals that of a 40watt incandesent bulb ,but with a much brighter white color
It depends on the type of bulb.
A Tulip
bulb
This is called the filament. It is what produces light. When voltage is applied it becomes white hot and emits heat and light.
If your hair is falling out with a white bulb it is shed hair and the white bulb is the root.
A bulb plant with white star flowers is likely a Star of Bethlehem (Ornithogalum umbellatum). This plant produces clusters of small, star-shaped white flowers on long stems that arise from the bulb. Star of Bethlehem blooms in spring and early summer and is a popular choice for gardens and floral arrangements.