10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «TUBERIFEROUS»
Discover the use of
tuberiferous in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
tuberiferous and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Circulars and Agricultural Journal of the Royal Botanic ...
Stem winged, without prickles, tuberiferous. Leaves opposite, ovate to cordate,
acuminate, caudate, 7-veined, sinus semi-circular. Yam, a single tuber, often
compressed, elongate, slightly branching, resembling .' Angilly-ala ;" skin deep
purple ...
Royal Botanical Gardens, Peradeniya, 1905
2
Circulars and Agricultural Journal of the Royal Botanic ...
(Kiri, milk ; vel-ala, climbing yam); “White yam.” Dioscorea alata, var.——Stem
winged, tuberiferous, without prickles. Leaves opposite, ovate, acuminate,
caudate, with a wide sinus, blade 5 to 7 inches long, 7-veined ; petiole 4 to 6
inches long.
Peradeniya, Ceylon. Royal botanic gardens, 1905
3
Circulars and Agricultural Journal of the Royal Botanic ...
Hingur- or Ingur-ala, Sinh. (Inguru, ginger ; the form of the yam resembles that of
ginger tubers). Dioscorea alata, var. — Stem winged, slender, tuberiferous,
without prickles. Leaves opposite or alternate. Yam solitary, often compressed,
with ...
I. TUBERiFEROUS ROOTS OF HYDROCOTYLE AMER1CANA Kellogg. BY S. B.
PARiSH. Three of the North American species of Hydrocotyle within recent years
have been ascertained to be tuberiferous. Attention was first directed to this ...
Townshend Stith Brandegee, Katharine Layne Brandegee, 1891
5
Synoptical flora of North America
Caulescent or subcaulescent from short eespitose rootstocks, not tuberiferous :
peduncles simple and naked, a span to a foot long: leaves from oblong to linear,
from entire to pinnatifid, thickish : head smaller than of the preceding. — Jlyoseris
...
Asa Gray, Smithsonian Institution, 1884
6
The American Midland Naturalist
It represents three types: one with tuberiferous stolons besides slender runners,
another with rosette-bearing runners, and finally a third type, a creeping herb*
with the axis representing a monopodium, the inflorescences being axillary.
7
he Agricultural journal of the Cape of Good Hope
The new plant lavishly described in the Advertiser is just such another
tuberiferous Labiate. There are several species, but none of them are potato
plants. The one cultivated by M. Edouard Heckel in the Marseilles Colonial
Garden is ...
8
Evolutionary Studies in World Crops: Diversity and Change in ...
The species are broadly classified into two major groups, tuberiferous and non-
tuberiferous. The tuber-forming species have attracted the attention of cyto-
geneticists and plant breeders from time to time (Magoon, Ramanujam and
Cooper, ...
9
The Agricultural Journal of the Cape of Good Hope
The new plant lavishly described in the Advertiser is just such another
tuberiferous Labiate. There are several species, but none of them are potato
plants. The one cultivated by M. Edouard Heckel in the Marseilles Colonial
Garden is ...
Cape of Good Hope (Colony). Dept. of Agriculture, 1903
10
Aquatic and Wetland Plants of Southeastern United States: ...
169 Plant with spongy-thickened or tuberiferous rootstocks. Stem rigid, simple or
sparingly branched, to l m tall, 4-sided, wing-angled at midstem, sparsely
glandular-pubeScent (sometimes only at the nodes). Leaves ascending, ovate,
elliptic, ...
Robert K. Godfrey, Jean W. Wooten, 2011