A short dispersal of bulbils may be only explained by translocation of substrate through tree falls, through digging or wallowing activities of animals.
32.
Bulbils are also formed by a few other, far less common species, including one called the Bulbil lily ( L . bulbiferum ).
33.
Bulbils are also formed by a few other, far less common species, including one called the Bulbil lily ( L . bulbiferum ).
34.
Some species, such as the Uruguayan " Hippeastrum petiolatum ", are reproduces asexually, producing many bulbils around the mother bulb.
35.
The roots are often tuberous and succulent, and several species also reproduce vegetatively by production of bulbils, which detach to produce new plants.
36.
This eventually detaches from the stem, and acts as the functional equivalent of a samara, carrying the attached bulbil to a new site.
37.
Some lilies, such as the tiger lily " Lilium lancifolium ", form small bulbs, called bulbils, in their leaf axils.
38.
New plants develop from bulbils that form on the plant, and these bulbils serve as a means of resprouting occurs from bulbils and underground tubers.
39.
New plants develop from bulbils that form on the plant, and these bulbils serve as a means of resprouting occurs from bulbils and underground tubers.
40.
New plants develop from bulbils that form on the plant, and these bulbils serve as a means of resprouting occurs from bulbils and underground tubers.