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Tuber

Tubers are a type of enlarged structure used as storage organs for nutrients in some plants. They are used for the plant's perennation (survival of the winter or dry months), to provide energy and nutrients for regrowth during the next growing season, and as a means of asexual reproduction.[1] Stem tubers form thickened rhizomes (underground stems) or stolons (horizontal connections between organisms); well known species with stem tubers include the potato and yam. Some writers also treat modified lateral roots (root tubers) under the definition; these are found in sweet potatoes, cassava, and dahlias.

Ulluku (Ullucus tuberosus) tubers

Terminology edit

The term originates from the Latin tuber, meaning "lump, bump, swelling".[2]

Some writers define the term "tuber" to mean only structures derived from stems;[3] others use the term for structures derived from stems or roots.[4]

Stem tubers edit

A stem tuber forms from thickened rhizomes or stolons. The top sides of the tuber produce shoots that grow into typical stems and leaves and the undersides produce roots. They tend to form at the sides of the parent plant and are most often located near the soil surface. The underground tuber is normally a short-lived storage and regenerative organ developing from a shoot that branches off a mature plant. The offspring or new tubers are attached to a parent tuber or form at the end of a hypogeogenous (initiated below ground) rhizome. In the autumn the plant dies, except for the new offspring tubers, which have one dominant bud that in spring regrows a new shoot producing stems and leaves; in summer the tubers decay and new tubers begin to grow. Some plants also form smaller tubers or tubercules that act like seeds, producing small plants that resemble (in morphology and size) seedlings. Some stem tubers are long-lived, such as those of tuberous begonias, but many plants have tubers that survive only until the plants have fully leafed out, at which point the tuber is reduced to a shriveled-up husk.[citation needed]

 
Flowers and tuber of Anredera cordifolia

Stem tubers generally start off as enlargements of the hypocotyl section of a seedling, but sometimes also include the first node or two of the epicotyl and the upper section of the root. The tuber has a vertical orientation, with one or a few vegetative buds on the top and fibrous roots produced on the bottom from a basal section. Typically the tuber has an oblong rounded shape.[citation needed]

Tuberous begonias, yams,[5][6] and cyclamens are commonly grown stem tubers. Mignonette vine (Anredera cordifolia) produces aerial stem tubers on 3.5-to-7.5-metre-tall (12 to 25 ft) vines; the tubers fall to the ground and grow. Plectranthus esculentus, of the mint family Lamiaceae, produces tuberous underground organs from the base of the stem, weighing up to 1.8 kg (3 lb 15 oz) per tuber, forming from axillary buds producing short stolons that grow into tubers.[7] Even though legumes are not commonly associated with forming stem tubers, Lathyrus tuberosus is an example native to Asia and Europe, where it was once grown as a crop.[8]

Potatoes edit

 
Potato plant with revealed tubers

Potatoes are stem tubers – enlarged stolons thicken to develop into storage organs.[9][10][11] The tuber has all the parts of a normal stem, including nodes and internodes. The nodes are the eyes and each has a leaf scar. The nodes or eyes are arranged around the tuber in a spiral fashion beginning on the end opposite the attachment point to the stolon. The terminal bud is produced at the farthest point away from the stolon attachment and tubers, and thus show the same apical dominance as a normal stem. Internally, a tuber is filled with starch stored in enlarged parenchyma-like cells. The inside of a tuber has the typical cell structures of any stem, including a pith, vascular zones, and a cortex.[citation needed]

The tuber is produced in one growing season and used to perennate the plant and as a means of propagation. When fall comes, the above-ground structure of the plant dies, but the tubers survive underground over winter until spring, when they regenerate new shoots that use the stored food in the tuber to grow. As the main shoot develops from the tuber, the base of the shoot close to the tuber produces adventitious roots and lateral buds on the shoot. The shoot also produces stolons that are long etiolated stems. The stolon elongates during long days with the presence of high auxins levels that prevent root growth off of the stolon. Before new tuber formation begins, the stolon must be a certain age. The enzyme lipoxygenase makes a hormone, jasmonic acid, which is involved in the control of potato tuber development.[citation needed]

The stolons are easily recognized when potato plants are grown from seeds. As the plants grow, stolons are produced around the soil surface from the nodes. The tubers form close to the soil surface and sometimes even on top of the ground. When potatoes are cultivated, the tubers are cut into pieces and planted much deeper into the soil. Planting the pieces deeper creates more area for the plants to generate the tubers and their size increases. The pieces sprout shoots that grow to the surface. These shoots are rhizome-like and generate short stolons from the nodes while in the ground. When the shoots reach the soil surface, they produce roots and shoots that grow into the green plant.[citation needed]

Root tubers edit

 
Freshly dug sweet potato plants with tubers

A 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. Plants with tuberous roots include the sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas), cassava, and dahlia.[citation needed]

Root tubers are perennating organs, thickened roots that store nutrients over periods when the plant cannot actively grow, thus permitting survival from one year to the next. The massive enlargement of secondary roots typically represented by sweet potato have the internal and external cell and tissue structures of a normal root; they produce adventitious roots and stems, which again produce adventitious roots.[12]

In root tubers, there are no nodes and internodes or reduced leaves. The proximal end of the tuber, which was attached to the old plant, has crown tissue that produces buds which grow into new stems and foliage.[13] The distal end of the tuber normally produces unmodified roots. In stem tubers the order is reversed, with the distal end producing stems. Tuberous roots are biennial in duration: the plant produces tubers the first year, and at the end of the growing season, the shoots often die, leaving the newly generated tubers; the next growing season, the tubers produce new shoots. As the shoots of the new plant grow, the stored reserves of the tuber are consumed in the production of new roots, stems, and reproductive organs; any remaining root tissue dies concurrently to the plant's regeneration of the next generation of tubers.[citation needed]

 
Hemerocallis roots showing tuberous enlargement

The Hemerocallis fulva daylily and a number of daylily hybrids have large root tubers; H. fulva spreads by underground stolons[14] that end with a new fan that grows roots that produce thick tubers and then send out more stolons.[8][15]

Root tubers, along with other storage tissues that plants produce, are consumed by animals as a rich source of nutrients. The root tubers of arrowhead plants of the genus Sagittaria are eaten by ducks.[16]

Plants with root tubers are propagated in late summer to late winter by digging up the tubers and separating them, making sure that each piece has some crown tissue for replanting.[citation needed]

See also edit

  • Bulb, modified stems with a short fleshy vertical stem, covered by thick fleshy modified leaves that enclose a bud for the next season's growth[17]
  • Caudex, a form of stem modification similar in appearance to a tuber
  • Corm, modified stems covered by dry scale-like leaves called a tunic, differing from true bulbs by having distinct nodes and internodes
  • Taproot, the largest, most central, and most dominant root of some plants

References edit

  1. ^ Rooting Cuttings of Tropical Trees, London: Commonwealth Science Council, 1994, p. 11, ISBN 978-0-85092-394-0
  2. ^ "Tuber". Online Etymology Dictionary. from the original on 2016-02-15.
  3. ^ Mauseth, James D. (2012), Botany: An Introduction to Plant Biology (5th ed.), Sudbury, MA: Jones and Bartlett Learning, ISBN 978-1-4496-6580-7, p. 672
  4. ^ Beentje, Henk (2010), The Kew Plant Glossary, Richmond, Surrey: Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, ISBN 978-1-84246-422-9, p. 124
  5. ^ Raz, Lauren (2002). "Dioscoreaceae". In Flora of North America Editorial Committee (ed.). Flora of North America North of Mexico (FNA). Vol. 26. New York and Oxford: Flora of North America North of Mexico. from the original on 2006-04-19 – via eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, MO & Harvard University Herbaria, Cambridge, MA.
  6. ^ Martin, FW; Ortiz, Sonia (1963). "Origin and Anatomy of Tubers of Dioscorea Floribunda and D. Spiculiflora". Botanical Gazette. 124 (6): 416–421. doi:10.1086/336228. JSTOR 2473209. S2CID 84746878.
  7. ^ J. Allemann; P.J. Robbertse; P.S. Hammes (20 June 2003). "Organographic and anatomical evidence that the edible storage organs of Plectranthus esculentus N.E.Br. (Lamiaceae) are stem tubers". Field Crops Research. 83 (1): 35–39. doi:10.1016/S0378-4290(03)00054-6.
  8. ^ a b Mansfeld, Rudolf (2001), Mansfeld's Encyclopedia of Agricultural and Horticultural Crops, Berlin: Springer, p. 2231, ISBN 978-3-540-41017-1
  9. ^ University of California, Berkeley. "Potato Genome Project". Retrieved 17 July 2018.
  10. ^ "Interrelationships of the number of initial sprouts, stems, stolons and tubers per potato plant" Journal Potato Research. Springer Netherlands ISSN 0014-3065 (Print) ISSN 1871-4528 (Online) Volume 33, Number 2 / June 1990
  11. ^ . Pennsylvania State University - Environmental Science. Monaco Educational Service. 2000. Archived from the original on 2005-04-13. Retrieved 2005-05-10.
  12. ^ Davis, Tim D.; Haissig, Bruce E., eds. (1994), Biology of Adventitious Root Formation, New York: Plenum Press, p. 17, ISBN 978-0-306-44627-6
  13. ^ Kyte, Lydiane; Kleyn, John (1996), Plants from Test Tubes: An Introduction to Micropropagation, Portland, Or.: Timber Press, pp. 23–24, ISBN 978-0-88192-361-2
  14. ^ Chen, Xinqi; Noguchi, Junko. "Hemerocallis fulva". Flora of China. Vol. 24. from the original on 14 November 2016. Retrieved 27 April 2018 – via eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, MO & Harvard University Herbaria, Cambridge, MA.
  15. ^ http://sain.utk.edu/invasives/species32.shtml[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ Hammerson, Geoffrey A. (2004), Connecticut Wildlife: Biodiversity, Natural History, and Conservation, Hanover: University Press of New England, p. 89, ISBN 978-1-58465-369-1
  17. ^ Davis, P.H.; Cullen, J. (1979), The Identification of Flowering Plant Families, including a Key to those Native and Cultivated in North Temperate Regions, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 102, ISBN 978-0-521-29359-4

External links edit

  • Cook's Thesaurus has a good inventory of tuber varieties.
  • CGIAR Research Program on Roots, Tubers and Bananas

tuber, fungal, genus, fungus, other, uses, disambiguation, potatoes, sometimes, called, just, tubers, type, enlarged, structure, used, storage, organs, nutrients, some, plants, they, used, plant, perennation, survival, winter, months, provide, energy, nutrient. For fungal genus see Tuber fungus For other uses see Tuber disambiguation Potatoes are sometimes called just tubers Tubers are a type of enlarged structure used as storage organs for nutrients in some plants They are used for the plant s perennation survival of the winter or dry months to provide energy and nutrients for regrowth during the next growing season and as a means of asexual reproduction 1 Stem tubers form thickened rhizomes underground stems or stolons horizontal connections between organisms well known species with stem tubers include the potato and yam Some writers also treat modified lateral roots root tubers under the definition these are found in sweet potatoes cassava and dahlias Ulluku Ullucus tuberosus tubers Contents 1 Terminology 2 Stem tubers 2 1 Potatoes 3 Root tubers 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksTerminology editThe term originates from the Latin tuber meaning lump bump swelling 2 Some writers define the term tuber to mean only structures derived from stems 3 others use the term for structures derived from stems or roots 4 Stem tubers editA stem tuber forms from thickened rhizomes or stolons The top sides of the tuber produce shoots that grow into typical stems and leaves and the undersides produce roots They tend to form at the sides of the parent plant and are most often located near the soil surface The underground tuber is normally a short lived storage and regenerative organ developing from a shoot that branches off a mature plant The offspring or new tubers are attached to a parent tuber or form at the end of a hypogeogenous initiated below ground rhizome In the autumn the plant dies except for the new offspring tubers which have one dominant bud that in spring regrows a new shoot producing stems and leaves in summer the tubers decay and new tubers begin to grow Some plants also form smaller tubers or tubercules that act like seeds producing small plants that resemble in morphology and size seedlings Some stem tubers are long lived such as those of tuberous begonias but many plants have tubers that survive only until the plants have fully leafed out at which point the tuber is reduced to a shriveled up husk citation needed nbsp Flowers and tuber of Anredera cordifoliaStem tubers generally start off as enlargements of the hypocotyl section of a seedling but sometimes also include the first node or two of the epicotyl and the upper section of the root The tuber has a vertical orientation with one or a few vegetative buds on the top and fibrous roots produced on the bottom from a basal section Typically the tuber has an oblong rounded shape citation needed Tuberous begonias yams 5 6 and cyclamens are commonly grown stem tubers Mignonette vine Anredera cordifolia produces aerial stem tubers on 3 5 to 7 5 metre tall 12 to 25 ft vines the tubers fall to the ground and grow Plectranthus esculentus of the mint family Lamiaceae produces tuberous underground organs from the base of the stem weighing up to 1 8 kg 3 lb 15 oz per tuber forming from axillary buds producing short stolons that grow into tubers 7 Even though legumes are not commonly associated with forming stem tubers Lathyrus tuberosus is an example native to Asia and Europe where it was once grown as a crop 8 Potatoes edit Main article Potato nbsp Potato plant with revealed tubersPotatoes are stem tubers enlarged stolons thicken to develop into storage organs 9 10 11 The tuber has all the parts of a normal stem including nodes and internodes The nodes are the eyes and each has a leaf scar The nodes or eyes are arranged around the tuber in a spiral fashion beginning on the end opposite the attachment point to the stolon The terminal bud is produced at the farthest point away from the stolon attachment and tubers and thus show the same apical dominance as a normal stem Internally a tuber is filled with starch stored in enlarged parenchyma like cells The inside of a tuber has the typical cell structures of any stem including a pith vascular zones and a cortex citation needed The tuber is produced in one growing season and used to perennate the plant and as a means of propagation When fall comes the above ground structure of the plant dies but the tubers survive underground over winter until spring when they regenerate new shoots that use the stored food in the tuber to grow As the main shoot develops from the tuber the base of the shoot close to the tuber produces adventitious roots and lateral buds on the shoot The shoot also produces stolons that are long etiolated stems The stolon elongates during long days with the presence of high auxins levels that prevent root growth off of the stolon Before new tuber formation begins the stolon must be a certain age The enzyme lipoxygenase makes a hormone jasmonic acid which is involved in the control of potato tuber development citation needed The stolons are easily recognized when potato plants are grown from seeds As the plants grow stolons are produced around the soil surface from the nodes The tubers form close to the soil surface and sometimes even on top of the ground When potatoes are cultivated the tubers are cut into pieces and planted much deeper into the soil Planting the pieces deeper creates more area for the plants to generate the tubers and their size increases The pieces sprout shoots that grow to the surface These shoots are rhizome like and generate short stolons from the nodes while in the ground When the shoots reach the soil surface they produce roots and shoots that grow into the green plant citation needed Root tubers edit nbsp Freshly dug sweet potato plants with tubersA 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 Plants with tuberous roots include the sweet potato Ipomoea batatas cassava and dahlia citation needed Root tubers are perennating organs thickened roots that store nutrients over periods when the plant cannot actively grow thus permitting survival from one year to the next The massive enlargement of secondary roots typically represented by sweet potato have the internal and external cell and tissue structures of a normal root they produce adventitious roots and stems which again produce adventitious roots 12 In root tubers there are no nodes and internodes or reduced leaves The proximal end of the tuber which was attached to the old plant has crown tissue that produces buds which grow into new stems and foliage 13 The distal end of the tuber normally produces unmodified roots In stem tubers the order is reversed with the distal end producing stems Tuberous roots are biennial in duration the plant produces tubers the first year and at the end of the growing season the shoots often die leaving the newly generated tubers the next growing season the tubers produce new shoots As the shoots of the new plant grow the stored reserves of the tuber are consumed in the production of new roots stems and reproductive organs any remaining root tissue dies concurrently to the plant s regeneration of the next generation of tubers citation needed nbsp Hemerocallis roots showing tuberous enlargementThe Hemerocallis fulva daylily and a number of daylily hybrids have large root tubers H fulva spreads by underground stolons 14 that end with a new fan that grows roots that produce thick tubers and then send out more stolons 8 15 Root tubers along with other storage tissues that plants produce are consumed by animals as a rich source of nutrients The root tubers of arrowhead plants of the genus Sagittaria are eaten by ducks 16 Plants with root tubers are propagated in late summer to late winter by digging up the tubers and separating them making sure that each piece has some crown tissue for replanting citation needed See also editBulb modified stems with a short fleshy vertical stem covered by thick fleshy modified leaves that enclose a bud for the next season s growth 17 Caudex a form of stem modification similar in appearance to a tuber Corm modified stems covered by dry scale like leaves called a tunic differing from true bulbs by having distinct nodes and internodes Taproot the largest most central and most dominant root of some plantsReferences edit Rooting Cuttings of Tropical Trees London Commonwealth Science Council 1994 p 11 ISBN 978 0 85092 394 0 Tuber Online Etymology Dictionary Archived from the original on 2016 02 15 Mauseth James D 2012 Botany An Introduction to Plant Biology 5th ed Sudbury MA Jones and Bartlett Learning ISBN 978 1 4496 6580 7 p 672 Beentje Henk 2010 The Kew Plant Glossary Richmond Surrey Royal Botanic Gardens Kew ISBN 978 1 84246 422 9 p 124 Raz Lauren 2002 Dioscoreaceae In Flora of North America Editorial Committee ed Flora of North America North of Mexico FNA Vol 26 New York and Oxford Flora of North America North of Mexico Archived from the original on 2006 04 19 via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA Martin FW Ortiz Sonia 1963 Origin and Anatomy of Tubers of Dioscorea Floribunda and D Spiculiflora Botanical Gazette 124 6 416 421 doi 10 1086 336228 JSTOR 2473209 S2CID 84746878 J Allemann P J Robbertse P S Hammes 20 June 2003 Organographic and anatomical evidence that the edible storage organs of Plectranthus esculentus N E Br Lamiaceae are stem tubers Field Crops Research 83 1 35 39 doi 10 1016 S0378 4290 03 00054 6 a b Mansfeld Rudolf 2001 Mansfeld s Encyclopedia of Agricultural and Horticultural Crops Berlin Springer p 2231 ISBN 978 3 540 41017 1 University of California Berkeley Potato Genome Project Retrieved 17 July 2018 Interrelationships of the number of initial sprouts stems stolons and tubers per potato plant Journal Potato Research Springer Netherlands ISSN 0014 3065 Print ISSN 1871 4528 Online Volume 33 Number 2 June 1990 Introduction to Stems Pennsylvania State University Environmental Science Monaco Educational Service 2000 Archived from the original on 2005 04 13 Retrieved 2005 05 10 Davis Tim D Haissig Bruce E eds 1994 Biology of Adventitious Root Formation New York Plenum Press p 17 ISBN 978 0 306 44627 6 Kyte Lydiane Kleyn John 1996 Plants from Test Tubes An Introduction to Micropropagation Portland Or Timber Press pp 23 24 ISBN 978 0 88192 361 2 Chen Xinqi Noguchi Junko Hemerocallis fulva Flora of China Vol 24 Archived from the original on 14 November 2016 Retrieved 27 April 2018 via eFloras org Missouri Botanical Garden St Louis MO amp Harvard University Herbaria Cambridge MA http sain utk edu invasives species32 shtml permanent dead link Hammerson Geoffrey A 2004 Connecticut Wildlife Biodiversity Natural History and Conservation Hanover University Press of New England p 89 ISBN 978 1 58465 369 1 Davis P H Cullen J 1979 The Identification of Flowering Plant Families including a Key to those Native and Cultivated in North Temperate Regions Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 102 ISBN 978 0 521 29359 4External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tubers Cook s Thesaurus has a good inventory of tuber varieties CGIAR Research Program on Roots Tubers and Bananas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tuber amp oldid 1182797212, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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