Examples of 'lignotuber' in a sentence
Meaning of "lignotuber"
lignotuber (noun): A woody swelling at or below ground level on various Australian plants, from which new stems arise after a fire or other disturbance
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- A starchy enlargement (caudex), usually of a root, of a woody plant, serving to store water.
How to use "lignotuber" in a sentence
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lignotuber
It forms a lignotuber and has glaucous branchlets.
It has a mallee habit and forms a lignotuber.
It has a lignotuber and tuberous roots.
It is one of the few beaufortias with a lignotuber.
It has a lignotuber and can form multiple stems.
It has a straggly form and forms a lignotuber.
Plants that lack a lignotuber have a single stem.
It regenerates from fire by regrowing from a lignotuber.
Young plants develop a lignotuber in their first year.
It can be pruned heavily as it resprouts from its lignotuber.
It has no lignotuber and a single stem.
It has smooth bark and a lignotuber.
It has a lignotuber and villous branchlets.
It is thought to be able to resprout from a lignotuber following a fire.
It has a lignotuber and will resprout basally following fire.
See also
Corymbia citriodora has a lignotuber.
During a fire a lignotuber is helpful in the reestablishment of the plant.
There is usually a single branch at the base and no lignotuber.
It forms a lignotuber and has a single trunk and a sparse canopy.
The tree has a lignotuber.
The tree forms a lignotuber and has a spherical to domed habit.
The plant forms a lignotuber.
The tree forms a lignotuber and seeds can germinate in approximately three weeks.
The tree forms a lignotuber.
Entries also indicate whether the species possesses a lignotuber.
It lacks a lignotuber.
It regenerates after bushfire by resprouting from its underground lignotuber.
Banksia aemula resprouts from a lignotuber or shoots from epicormic buds after fire.
Lomatia fraseri regenerates after bushfire by resprouting from a lignotuber.
It regenerates from fire via lignotuber or epicormic buds from its fire-tolerant trunk.
Banksia candolleana regenerates from a woody lignotuber after bushfire.
The tree will mostly have a single trunk forming from a lignotuber.
It also has a lignotuber.
Two subspecies were recognised, A. glabrescens subsp . glabrescens has long narrow leaves and a lignotuber.
It does not possess a lignotuber.
Eucalyptus major is a tree that typically grows to a height of 20 m ( 66 ft ) and forms a lignotuber.
Banksia aemula resprouts from its woody lignotuber after fire.
The tree often has a gnarled appearance in exposed areas and has a lignotuber.
It is cultivated from a lignotuber.
Eucalyptus clivicola is a mallet that typically grows to a height of 12 m ( 39 ft ) and rarely forms a lignotuber.
The tree is a Marlock and has no lignotuber.
It grows as a tree or shrub up to seven metres in height, and lacks a lignotuber.
The erect, multistemmed tree is able to resprout from its lignotuber after fire.
It grows as a sprawling shrub up to about two metres high, with a lignotuber.
It often has several thin trunks emerging from a lignotuber.
Blackbutt is a Eucalyptus species without a lignotuber.
It regenerates from bushfire by regrowing from its woody base, known as a lignotuber.
Unlike many other banksia species, it does not have a woody base, or lignotuber.
Unlike the mallee, it is single-stemmed and lacks a lignotuber.
The small tree typically grows to a height of 10 metres ( 33 ft ) and does not form a lignotuber.