Re: Tubers, corms and bulbs, oh my!
- Subject: Re: Tubers, corms and bulbs, oh my!
- From: &* C* <T*@mobot.org>
- Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 16:07:45 -0600
|
Dear Christopher: That is an excellent
distinction that you made for the difference between tuber and corm. I have
always assumed that the corm was non existent in Araceae since most storage
organs called stems are just a big bag of starch. Tom From:
aroid-l-bounces@gizmoworks.com [mailto:aroid-l-bounces@gizmoworks.com] On Behalf Of Christopher Rogers Hiyer! I recently had a discussion with few
Aroid Oriented Individuals about proper terminology for the non-root,
subterranean aroid parts. Or to put it another way, do plants like
Amorphophallus, Arum, Helicodiceros, Typhonium, Colocasia, Ambrosina, and the
like have tubers, corms or bulbs? The answer is that they have tubers. (Or
for dear Julius’ sake, “chubas”). A bulb is composed of thick, modified
leaves, arranged in layers, for food storage. An onion is a perfect example. A corm is composed entirely of stem
tissue. It is literally just an underground stem. It has an epidermal layer, a
vascular cylinder with phloem and xylem and central pith. A corm can also be a
starch storage organ, but it still has true stem tissue. This is why a corm has
the new foliage growth coming from the top and the roots coming from the base.
Corm examples are Crocus, Cyclamen and Gladiolus. A cormel is just a diminutive
corm. A tuber is just parenchyma (with some
vascular tissue). It has an epidermal layer with some subdermal vascular
tissue, and all the rest is parenchyma. It is almost entirely a starch storage
organ. This is why the foliage and the roots all come from the top. Most plants
with tubers have them borne on stolons, but that is not necessary. In
Amorphophallus, Arum and Typhonium for example, the stem tissue is all encased
in the small bud at the top of the tuber. That bud grows upward into a leaf or
two, and outward into roots, with the tuber beneath. Other tuber examples are
potatoes and Sinningia. A bulbil, in the aroid sense, is just a
tuber that forms on leaves or leaf axils. It is an unfortunate term as it
obviously leads to confusion. I really hope that this is helpful to the
Aroid community at large, and I hope it cuts down on some of the confusion
surrounding these terms. I am sure Pete, Wilbert, Tom, Julius, The Banta or
someone can elucidate further, particularly as far as tuberous rhizomes or
rhizomatic tubers are concerned. Happy days, Christopher D. Christopher Rogers Senior Invertebrate Ecologist/ Taxonomist ((,///////////=======< branchiopod@gmail.com EcoAnalysts,
Inc. 1.530.383.4798 Invertebrate Taxonomy Endangered Species Ecological Studies Bioassessment Invasive Species Plankton Phycology IDAHO ∙ CALIFORNIA ∙ MISSOURI ∙
PENNSYLVANIA ∙ VANCOUVER WWW.ECOANALYSTS.COM ∙ E*@ECOANALYSTS.COM |
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- Tubers, corms and bulbs, oh my!
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- Tubers, corms and bulbs, oh my!
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