Dictionary Definition
tuber
Noun
1 a fleshy underground stem or root serving for
reproductive and food storage
2 type genus of the Tuberaceae: fungi whose
fruiting bodies are typically truffles [syn: genus
Tuber]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
tyo͞o'bə(r), /tjuːbə(r)/, /tju:b@(r)/- Rhymes: -uːbə(r)
Noun
tuber (tubers)Related terms
Translations
fleshy underground stem
- Finnish: mukula
Extensive Definition
Tubers are various types of modified plant
structures that are enlarged to store nutrients. They are used by
plants to overwinter and
regrow the next year and as a means of asexual
reproduction. Two different groups of tubers are: stem tubers,
and root tubers.
Stem tubers
A Stem tuber forms from thickened rhizomes or stolons. The tops or sides of the tuber produce shoots that grow into typical stems and leaves and the under sides produce roots. They tend to form at the sides of the parent plant and are most often located near the soil surface. The below-ground stem 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 rhizome. In the fall the plant dies except for the new offspring stem tubers which have one dominant bud, which 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 and/or tubercules which act like seeds, producing small plants that resemble in morphology and size seedlings. Some stem tubers are long lived such as those of tuberous begonia but many tuberous 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.Stem tubers generally start off as enlargements
of the hypococtyl section of a seedling but also sometimes include
the first node or two of the epicotyl and the upper section of the
root. The stem 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 stem tuber has an oblong
rounded shape.
Tuberous begonia and Cyclamen are commonly grown
stem tubers. Mignonette vine (Anredera
cordifolia) produces aerial stem tubers on 12 to 25 foot tall
vines, the tubers fall to the ground and grow. Plectranthus
esculentus of the mint family Lamiaceae,
produces tuberous under ground organs from the base of the stem,
weighing up to 1.8 kg per tuber, forming from axillary buds
producing short stolons that grow into tubers.
Potatoes
Potato tubers are the development of enlarged stolons thickened into storage organs, they are specialized swollen stems.The tuber has all the parts of a normal stem,
including nodes and internodes, the nodes are the eyes and each
have 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 tuber thus shows the same
apical dominance of a normal stem. Internally a tuber is filled
with starch stored in enlarged parenchyma like cells; also
internally the tuber has the typical cell structures of any stem,
including a pith, vascular zones and a cortex.
The tuber is produced in one growing season and
used to perennialize the plant and as a means of propagation. When
fall comes the above ground structure of the plant dies and the
tubers over winter under ground until spring, when they regenerate
new shoots which 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 produce stolons that are long etiolated
stems. The stolon elongates during long days with the presence of
auxins and high gibberellin levels that prevent root growth off of
the stolon. Before new tuber formation begins the stolon must be a
certain age. The hormone lipoxygenase is involved in the control of
potato tuber development.
The stolons are easily recognized when potato
plants are grown from seed, 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. By planting the pieces deeper
there is 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.
Stem tubers should not be confused with tuberous
roots, sometimes called root tubers, such as a sweet potato
or Dahlia.
See also:
Root tubers
A tuberous root is a modified lateral root, enlarged to function as a
storage
organ. It is thus different in origin but similar in function
and appearance to a tuber. Examples of plants with notable root
tubers include the sweet
potato, cassava and
Dahlia. It
is a structure used to perennialize the plant for survival from one
year to the next.
The thickened roots are storage organs that
differ from true tubers. The massive enlargement of secondary roots
typically represented by Sweet Potato (Ipomoea
batatas), have the internal and external cell structures of
typical roots. True tubers have the cell structure of stems, In
root tubers there are no nodes and internodes or reduced leaves.
One end called the proximal end has crown tissue that produces buds
that grow into stems and foliage. The other end called the distal
end normally produces unmodified roots. In true tubers the order is
reversed with the distal end producing stems. Tuberous roots are
biennial in duration, the first year the parent plant produces the
root tubers and in the fall the plant dies. The next year the root
tubers produce a new plant and are consumed in the production of
new roots and stems and flowering. The remaining tissue dies while
the plants generates new root tubers for the next year. Hemerocallis
fulva plus a number of Daylily hybrids have large root tubers,
H. fulva spreads by underground stolons that end with a new fan
that grows roots that produce thick root tubers and then send our
more stolons.
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 and
replanting.
References
External links
- Cook's Thesaurus has a good inventory of tuber varieties.
tuber in Aragonese: Tuberpotatoesclo
tuber in Czech: Hlíza
tuber in Danish: Knold (botanik)
tuber in German: Pflanzenknolle
tuber in Spanish: Raíz tuberosa
tuber in Spanish: Tubérculo
tuber in Esperanto: Tubero
tuber in French: Tubercule
tuber in Scottish Gaelic: Bolgan (luibh)
tuber in Italian: Rizotubero
tuber in Italian: Tubero
tuber in Hebrew: פקעת
tuber in Lithuanian: Šakniagumbis
tuber in Polish: Bulwa (botanika)
tuber in Portuguese: Tubérculo
tuber in Quechua: Allpapi puquq
tuber in Russian: Клубень
tuber in Serbian: Кртола
tuber in Vietnamese: Củ
tuber in Ukrainian: Бульба