- the
Mediterranean region have been
identified as
having lignotubers (as of 1993).
Lignotubers develop from the
cotyledonary bud in
seedlings of several...
-
which are able to re-sprout even when the
stems are
killed by fire.
Lignotubers,
woody structures around the
roots of
plants that
contains many dormant...
-
cover a
circle thirty feet (nine meters) in diameter. They
differ from
lignotubers which are more
compact in form, like a tuber. They are most
common in...
- mean pachycaul, thick-stemmed.
Caudices should not be
confused with
lignotubers which can also be very large. The term is from the
Latin caudex, a noun...
-
habit of
woody plants that grow with
multiple stems from
underground lignotubers Mallee (biogeographic region), a
biogeographic region in
southern Western...
- a wide
range of
adaptations to fire, such as
heavy seed production,
lignotubers, and fire-induced germination. In
botany and
ecology a
shrub is defined...
-
because they
possess fire-adaptive
traits like
serotiny and
storage lignotubers. It has been
postulated that on
arrival in New Zealand, L. scoparium...
-
major branches (epicormic shoots) or in
belowground structures like
lignotubers, bulbs, and
other structures.
Resprouters characterize chaparral, fynbos...
- eucalypts,
which grow with
multiple stems springing from an
underground lignotuber,
usually to a
height of no more than 10 m (33 ft). The term is widely...
-
shoot portions of a plant).
These dormant structures take the form of
lignotubers or
basal epicormic buds.
Plant species that can
accomplish crown sprouting...