Plants that form underground
storage organs, including bulbs as well as
tubers and
corms, are called
geophytes. Some
epiphytic orchids (family
Orchidaceae) form above-ground storage organs called
pseudobulbs, that superficially resemble bulbs. Nearly all plants that form true bulbs are
monocotyledons, and include: == Bulbil == A
bulbil is a small bulb, and may also be called a
bulblet,
bulbet, or
bulbel. Small bulbs can develop or propagate a large bulb. If one or several moderate-sized bulbs form to replace the original bulb, they are called
renewal bulbs.
Increase bulbs are small bulbs that develop either on each of the leaves inside a bulb, or else on the end of small underground stems connected to the original bulb. Some lilies, such as the tiger lily
Lilium lancifolium, form small bulbs, called bulbils, in their leaf
axils. Several members of the onion family, Alliaceae, including
Allium sativum (
garlic), form bulbils in their flower heads, sometimes as the flowers fade, or even instead of the flowers (which is a form of
apomixis). The so-called
tree onion (
Allium ×
proliferum) forms small onions which are large enough for
pickling. Some ferns, such as
the hen-and-chicken fern, produce new plants at the tips of the fronds' pinnae that are sometimes referred to as bulbils. Image:Lilium lancifolium bulbils.jpg|Bulbils form in the leaf axils of
Lilium lancifolium Image:Alliumvineale1web.jpg|Wild garlic (
Allium vineale) bulbils sprouting Image:Allium fistulosum bulbifera0.jpg|"
Tree onions" form clusters of small bulbs instead of flowers ==See also==