enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Storage organ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storage_organ

    Storage organs may act as perennating organs ('perennating' as in perennial, meaning "through the year", used in the sense of continuing beyond the year and in due course lasting for multiple years). These are used by plants to survive adverse periods in the plant's life-cycle (e.g. caused by cold, excessive heat, lack of light or drought).

  3. Perennation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perennation

    It typically involves development of a perennating organ, which stores enough nutrients to sustain the organism during the unfavourable season, and develops into one or more new plants the following year. Common forms of perennating organs are storage organs (e.g. tubers, rhizomes and corm), and buds.

  4. Stolon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stolon

    Stolons have longer internodes and function as means of seeking out light and are used for propagation of the plant, while rhizomes are used as storage organs for carbohydrates and the maintenance of meristem tissue to keep the parent plant alive from one year to the next. [21]

  5. Tuber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuber

    A root tuber, tuberous root or storage root is a modified lateral root, enlarged to function as a storage organ. The enlarged area of the tuber can be produced at the end or middle of a root or involve the entire root. It is thus different in origin, but similar in function and appearance, to a stem tuber.

  6. Two-year-old can name every organ in the body

    www.aol.com/news/2014-11-07-two-year-old-can...

    At 2 years old, Elizabeth Christensen is pretty darn talented. She explained in a YouTube video from the City of Plano, "These are the large intestines," and proceeded to tell us the name and ...

  7. Glossary of botanical terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_botanical_terms

    Specialized layer of tissue that allows an organ to be shed by abscission when it is ripe or senescent. Such tissue is commonly formed, for example, at the base of a petiole or pedicel. acaulescent Having no apparent stem, or at least none visible above the ground surface. [2] Examples include some species of Oxalis, [5] Nolina, [6] and Yucca. [7]

  8. Microplastics Are in All of Us. Just How Bad Is That, Really?

    www.aol.com/microplastics-us-just-bad-really...

    For example, though most of her clothes are made of non-plastic cotton and wool, some of her clothes are made of plastic fibers, like the spandex, polyester, and nylon in her activewear.

  9. Underground stem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underground_stem

    A geophyte (earth+plant) is a plant with an underground storage organ including true bulbs, corms, tubers, tuberous roots, enlarged hypocotyls, and rhizomes. Most plants with underground stems are geophytes but not all plants that are geophytes have underground stems. Geophytes are often physiologically active even when they lack leaves.