rhizome
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- University of Arkansas System - Division of Agriculture Cooperative Extension - Rhizomes
- Nature - Characterization of rhizome transcriptome and identification of a rhizomatous ER body in the clonal plant Cardamine leucantha
- Integrity Research Journals - Advanced Journal of Plant Biology - Morphology and anatomy of rhizome and root structures in seven Pteris L. species (Pteridaceae) from Southwestern Nigeria
- National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - Rhizome trait scaling relationships are modulated by growth conditions and are linked to plant fitness
- Oregon State University - Forage Information System - Rhizomes and Stolons
- Frontiers - A Genetic Network Underlying Rhizome Development in Oryza longistaminata
- Virginia Tech - Living-Learning Programs - Rhizome
- H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest - Andrews Forest Program - Composition of Rhizomes of Forest Herbaceous Plants in Relation To Morphology, Ecology and Burial By Thephra
- The Spruce - What to Know About Rhizomes and Plants
- Also called:
- creeping rootstalk
- Related Topics:
- root vegetable
- turmeric
- sacred lotus
- wasabi
- ginger
rhizome, horizontal underground plant stem capable of producing the shoot and root systems of a new plant. Rhizomes are used to store starches and proteins and enable plants to perennate (survive an annual unfavourable season) underground. In addition, those modified stems allow the parent plant to propagate vegetatively (asexually), and some plants, such as poplars and various bamboos, rely heavily on rhizomes for that purpose. In plants such as water lilies and many ferns, the rhizome is the only stem of the plant. In such cases, only the leaves and flowers are readily visible. Notably, the rhizomes of some species—including ginger, turmeric, and lotus—are edible and valued for their culinary applications.