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tubers and much
The patas monkey feeds on insects, gum, seeds, and tubers, a diet more characteristic of much smaller primates.
In eastern Indonesia, such as on the islands of Papua and Timor, where the climate is often much drier, the meals can be centered around other sources of carbohydrates such as sago and / or root vegetables and starchy tubers.
Naked mole rats feed primarily on very large tubers ( weighing as much as a thousand times the body weight of a typical mole rat ) that they find deep underground through their mining operations, but also eat their own feces.
While usable-sized tubers develop fairly early, they taste much sweeter after some frost.
Because they feed on roots and tubers, voles do not need to drink water much.
* Andean region: potatoes and other tubers, wheat ; beef, lamb and chicken ; not much fish as the region doesn't have a coastal line, with the exception being trout, which is raised on fish farms.

tubers and 75
Potatoes grow throughout the season, but it is estimated the tubers stop growing when 75 % of the canopy has been destroyed.
Each sunchoke root can make an additional 75 to as many as 200 tubers by fall end.

tubers and percent
Roots and tubers are important staples for over 1 billion people in the developing world ; accounting for roughly 40 percent of the food eaten by half the population of sub-Saharan Africa.
For example, the main energy source staples in the average African diet are cereals ( 46 percent ), roots and tubers ( 20 percent ) and animal products ( 7 percent ).
In Western Europe the main staples in the average diet are animal products ( 33 percent ), cereals ( 26 percent ) and roots and tubers ( 4 percent ).

tubers and mature
" Propagation generally occurs from seeds, although mature plants can be divided and grown from tubers.

tubers and plants
It includes perennial herbaceous plants which are glabrous and have short rhizomes with fibrous roots or are rhizomatous with root tubers.
Potatoes yield abundantly with little effort, and adapt readily to diverse climates as long as the climate is cool and moist enough for the plants to gather sufficient water from the soil to form the starchy tubers.
Potatoes are generally grown from seed potatoes – these are tubers specifically grown to be disease free and provide consistent and healthy plants.
Commercial growers plant potatoes as a row crop using seed tubers, young plants or microtubers and may mound the entire row.
In the water food is obtained by up-ending or dabbling, and their diet is composed of the roots, tubers, stems and leaves of aquatic and submerged plants.
The technical term for plants that form underground storage organs, including bulbs as well as tubers and corms, is geophyte.
They are less effective on perennial plants, which are able to regrow from rhizomes, roots or tubers.
Taro is a common name for the corms and tubers of several plants in the family Araceae ( see Taro ( disambiguation )).
These small to massive plants grow from a subterranean tuber, Amorphophallus tubers vary greatly from species to species, from the quite uniformly globose tuber of A. konjac to the elongated tubers of A. longituberosus and A. macrorhizus to the bizarre clustered rootstock of A. coaetaneus.
These plants are bulbous geophytes, as they bring their buds in underground tubers or bulbs, organs that annually produce new stems, leaves and flowers.
Most parts of the plants, especially the green parts and unripe fruit, are poisonous to humans ( although not necessarily to other animals ), but many species in the genus bear some edible parts, such as fruits, leaves, or tubers.
Freshly dug sweet potato plants with tubers.
Root tubers, along with other storage tissues that plants produce, are consumed by animals as a rich source of nutrients.
#‘ Rhizosphere ’ or ‘ underground ’ dimension of plants grown for their roots and tubers.
The spores of this oomycete over-winter on infected tubers, particularly those that are left in the ground after the previous year's harvest ; in cull piles, soil or infected volunteer plants and are spread rapidly in warm and wet conditions.
Other sources of food meriting special mention include deer, yam-like tubers and other wild plants, and freshwater fish.
# A ‘ rhizosphere ’ or ‘ underground ’ dimension of plants grown for their roots and tubers.
In wetlands roots, rhizomes, tubers and other parts of emergent plants, other molluscs, small fish and amphibians are also consumed as well.
They are ineffective on perennial plants that are able to re-grow from roots or tubers.
* Other plants like potatoes ( Solanum tuberosum ) and dahlia ( Dahlia ) reproduce by a method similar to bulbs: they produce tubers.
The word cormous is used to describe plants growing from corms, in analogy to the use of the terms " tuberous " and " bulbous " to describe plants growing from tubers and bulbs.
However, the quality of the edible tubers degrades unless the plants are dug up and replanted in fertile soil.

tubers and by
Any potato variety can also be propagated vegetatively by planting tubers, pieces of tubers, cut to include at least one or two eyes, or also by cuttings, a practice used in greenhouses for the production of healthy seed tubers.
These are often harvested by the home gardener or farmer by " grabbling ", i. e. pulling out the young tubers by hand while leaving the plant in place.
In western and coastal India, during weddings of the Marathi and Konkani people turmeric tubers are tied with strings by the couple to their wrists during a ceremony called Kankanabandhana.
* Potato starch flour is obtained by grinding the tubers to a pulp and removing the fibre and protein by water-washings.
" The sweet manioc beer ( nihamanci or nijiamanchi ), is prepared by first peeling and washing the tubers in the stream near the garden.
The word glycine is derived from the Greek – glykys ( sweet ) and likely refers to the sweetness of the pear-shaped ( apios in Greek ) edible tubers produced by the native North American twining or climbing herbaceous yambean legume, Glycine apios, now known as Apios americana.
The plant reproduces mostly by means of rhziomes ( tubers, corms ) but it also produces " clusters of two to five fragrant inflorescenes in the leaf axils ".
As Matakerepō counts out her ten taro tubers, Tāwhaki removes them one by one.
Tāwhaki removes the taro tubers one by one, until Whaitiri realises that it must be her grandson who she had foretold would come to find her.
The village and a locally-run campground, Blodgett Landing, are located at the confluence of the Hersey, one of the best trout streams in the state, and the Muskegon river, enjoyed by canoers and tubers.
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 out 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 for replanting.
The soup generally contains chicken, a floating cracked raw egg that is stirred in by the eater, kamaboko, vegetables and tubers.
Infected tubers develop grey or dark patches that are reddish brown beneath the skin, and quickly decay to a foul-smelling mush caused by the infestation of secondary soft bacterial rots.

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