write short notes on underground stem and storage roots with examples?
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Answer:
Underground stems are modified plants that derive from stem tissue but exist under the soil surface.[1] They function as storage tissues for food and nutrients, propagation of new clones, and perennation (survival from one growing season to the next).[2] Types include bulbs, corms, rhizomes, stolons, spindle-shaped[citation needed], and tubers.
Plants have two axes of growth, which can be best seen from seed germination and growth. Seedlings develop two structures or axes of growth, one that develops upward out of the soil, called stems, and structures that develop downward which are called roots. The roots are modified to have root hairs and branch indiscriminately with cells that take in water and nutrients, while the stems are modified to move water and nutrients to and from the leaves and flowers. Stems have nodes with buds where leaves and flowers arise at specific locations, while roots do not. Plants use under ground stems to multiply their numbers by asexual reproduction and to survive from one year to the next, usually over a period of dormancy.[3] Some plants produce stems modified to store energy and preserve a location of potential growth to survive a cold or dry period which normally is a period of inactive growth, and when that period is over the plants resume new growth from the underground stems.[4] Being underground protects the stems from the elements during the dormancy period, such as freezing and thawing in winter or extreme heat and drought in summer or fire. They can also protect plants from heavy grazing pressure from animals, the plant might be eaten to the ground but new growth can occur from below ground stem that can not be reached by the herbivores. A number of plants, including weedy species, use underground stems to spread and colonize large areas, since the stems do not have to be supported or strong, less energy and resources are needed to produce these stems and often these plants have more mass under ground than above ground.
Explanation:
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Answer:
Storage Roots – Modified roots that store water or food in an enlarged central stele (e.g. carrots) Tubers – Horizontal underground stems that store carbohydrates (e.g. potatoes)