Definition of Tuberoids. Meaning of Tuberoids. Synonyms of Tuberoids

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Tuberoids. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Tuberoids and, of course, Tuberoids synonyms and on the right images related to the word Tuberoids.

Definition of Tuberoids

No result for Tuberoids. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Tuberoids from wikipedia

- Tuberoid can refer to: A trade name of the drug Ethionamide In some plants, an underground storage organ formed by the swelling of a root This disambiguation...
- orchis, meaning "****", from the appearance of the paired subterranean tuberoids. These terrestrial orchids have root tubers instead of pseudobulbs. They...
- lactea, collected in Sardinia; the small size, compared to a one-Euro coin, and the two globose tuberoids typical of the Neotinea genus are highlighted...
- organ, e.g. a potato. The main other class is the root tuber, also called tuberoid. They differ from stem tubers in features such as that, like any normal...
- key to successful cultivation. Within Bartholina spp., the root-stem tuberoids are replaced every year, meaning that mycorrhizal ****ociations must be...
- absence of both stigmatic processes (typical in Habenaria) and ovoid root-tuberoids (characteristic of both Habenaria and Orchis). Still, P. nivea, P. clavellata...
- Sclerotinia nor the family Sclerotinaceae due to its lack of apothecia-producing tuberoid sclerotia. ****ual spores have never been observed in culture of North American...
- meaning "****", from the appearance of the paired subterranean 'tuberoids', while the Latin name pallens refers to the pale colour of the inflorescence...
- primarily distributed around the margins, and the undersides are silvery. The tuberoids are roughly spherical. C. papa bears minute solitary green flowers around...
- flowering stem. Microtis media are deciduous, chlorophyllous, sympodial, tuberoid terrestrial orchids with a single, tubular leaf 250–650 mm (9.8–25.6 in)...