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yer yer I know google is ya friend ....but....
...would you class a Bergonia as a stem or root tuber?
I would class a dahlia and a potatoe as a root tuber which grows after the topgrowth.
Would this not make the likes of begonia corms and gladioli corms stem tubers as they make a new tuber on the stem when original dies?
My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE)
The difference according to my course notes, which could be wrong.... Stem tubers are organs formed at the end of rhizomes which store food over winter and develop into independent plants in the following year.
Exampes are potatoes and artichokes
Root tubers are organs formed at the end of roots which store food over the winter. Root tubers are usually organs of perennation* only and do not develop into independent plants.
Examples of root tubers are dahlias
But the small flowering begonias you use as bedding plants for shady areas (Not the big blowsy flowered ones) are actually called fibrous rooted begonias. The big ones sound, from your description, to be root tubers. But then, that's only me.
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