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The chief means of reproduction in D. bulbifera is asexual and is dependent on vegetative growth from underground tubers and above-ground bulbils. Tubers and bulbils generally sprout in the spring and the new shoots often climb the dead stems of the previous year to reach the tree canopy. In the summer (June-July), a large number of new bulbils are produced which fall to the ground in late August. By the time seasonal stem die-back begins around October, a single vine may have put out as many as 200 bulbils (skillerplants.com 2004).
Potentially Misidentified Species
Florida is foster home to another invasive non-native Dioscorea, the water yam (= winged yam) Dioscorea alata. D. bulbifera and D. alata are superficially similar in appearance but distinguishing the two is straightforward. D. alata has a stem that is squarish in cross-section with wide ridges or wings, whereas the D. bulbifera stem is round in cross-section. Leaves are opposite in D. alata and alternate in D. bulbifera. The underground tubers of D. alata are also enormous, some weighing more than 45 kg, whereas the undergroind tubers D. bulbifera are small and may even be absent altogether (Langeland and Burks 1998). http://www.sms.si.edu/IRLSPEC/Dioscorea_bulbifera.htm
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The chief means of reproduction in D. bulbifera is asexual and is dependent on vegetative growth from underground tubers and above-ground bulbils. Tubers and bulbils generally sprout in the spring and the new shoots often climb the dead stems of the previous year to reach the tree canopy. In the summer (June-July), a large number of new bulbils are produced which fall to the ground in late August. By the time seasonal stem die-back begins around October, a single vine may have put out as many as 200 bulbils (skillerplants.com 2004).
Potentially Misidentified Species
Florida is foster home to another invasive non-native Dioscorea, the water yam (= winged yam) Dioscorea alata. D. bulbifera and D. alata are superficially similar in appearance but distinguishing the two is straightforward. D. alata has a stem that is squarish in cross-section with wide ridges or wings, whereas the D. bulbifera stem is round in cross-section. Leaves are opposite in D. alata and alternate in D. bulbifera. The underground tubers of D. alata are also enormous, some weighing more than 45 kg, whereas the undergroind tubers D. bulbifera are small and may even be absent altogether (Langeland and Burks 1998). http://www.sms.si.edu/IRLSPEC/Dioscorea_bulbifera.htm
Music: Swamp Dweller youtube.com/watch?v=HZhFPZToBWo&list=PLZeUAXFk7pOiA4FokodA4Xvc_-yBRmh-q
I'm moving new videos here https://bit.tube/StrontiumMilks
Also on Bitchute
bitchute.com/channel/strontiummilks
clean water options
multipureusa.com/ksmith
Minds allows users to be 100% anonymous, untracked and free from spying. Better than Facebook without the censorship Join Minds minds.com/register;referrer=Reup
Already on Minds? Check out my channel on Minds minds.com/Reup