the potato which we eat
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Potatoes grow underground, but the part we eat is not a root. It is a an underground stem called a tuber.
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Answered by
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Published on May 8, 2012.
It explains which parts of plants we eat (e.g. we eat roots like carrot, we eat stems like potato, we eat leaves like cabbage etc.).
A potato plant stores food underground for its future use. These foods are stored in tubers formed from stolons from the main potato plant stem.
Stolons are horizontal above the ground stems. These stems are used by the plant for asexual reproduction. A stolon enlarges to form food storing tubers of potato. The tubers are like stems and have nodes and internodes.
Only difference is they are rounded or filled like sacs. The nodes are the eyes of the potato, each having a leaf. Thus potatoes’ eyes can grow into new potato plants if left in the soil.
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It explains which parts of plants we eat (e.g. we eat roots like carrot, we eat stems like potato, we eat leaves like cabbage etc.).
A potato plant stores food underground for its future use. These foods are stored in tubers formed from stolons from the main potato plant stem.
Stolons are horizontal above the ground stems. These stems are used by the plant for asexual reproduction. A stolon enlarges to form food storing tubers of potato. The tubers are like stems and have nodes and internodes.
Only difference is they are rounded or filled like sacs. The nodes are the eyes of the potato, each having a leaf. Thus potatoes’ eyes can grow into new potato plants if left in the soil.
Hope u like the ans... Plse Mark me as brainlist.. And plse follow me
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