Priceless Bamboo Plants

December 28th, 2008 | by richard |

Bamboo Plant Video

Bamboo plants are among the world’s most useful and versatile plant. Unlike trees, bamboo grows at an astonishing rate of up to 2 inches per hour. This makes it the world’s fastest growing plant. There are several instances, the bamboo plant can grow up to 4 meters in a day.

Unlike many would believe, bamboo plants are not trees. In fact, they are evergreen grasses. These grasses fall into 91 different genera, with over 1,000 species currently known. As each species can be used for different things, this variety helps to make certain of the lasting survival of this plant.

This fast growing rate makes bamboo plants invaluable in eastern regions such as India, China and Japan. As the bamboo plants can be used as food, wood and fuel, the fast growing rate makes this renewable resource a cornerstone of those societies. As bamboo, when properly treated, can be extremely durable and long lasting, it provides an easy solution to many problems.

One of the most common uses of bamboo plants is their cultivation as building materials. In construction, bamboo can create large, stable scaffoldings, provide a base wood over slower growing trees, and provide ornamental value to both the interior and exterior of buildings. Other uses of bamboo material include tools such as durable cutting boards, chop sticks, tables and other pieces of furniture as well as components in popular games such as go.

When bamboo plants are just sprouting, the shoots can be consumed from many different varieties. However, not all types of bamboo shoots should be consumed. For example, some types like the giant bamboo contains cyanide within the shoots. Cyanide can be deadly to humans.

Many types of animals survive by eating bamboo. Most notably is the panda, which only lives on bamboo stalks and leaves.

Even with the many of contemporary uses of bamboo, bamboo plants do not come without problems. The bamboo plant, for reasons yet proven by science, tend to have mass blooming and fruiting seasons. This is most notable in the Bay of Bengal, where the bamboo plants fruit once every 30 to 35 years. This mass blooming and fruiting cases severe issues to human populations nearby. As the fruit falls to the ground, rats swarm. As the rats swarm, they carry disease with them and cause famine. This can cause many human deaths, as there is not much that can be done to stop the fruiting once it has begun. There is little that can be done, as~As the bamboo populations require the blooming season for survival, they cannot be simply destroyed to prevent the rat swarms.

Bamboo is a flexible plant and can grow in many areas across the globe. They are most commonly located in East Asia, although they can mature in sub-Saharan Africa, North and South America. Bamboo does not survive in Europe, North Africa, western Asia, Canada and Antarctica.

 

For more information visit Aloe Vera Plant also go to Carnivorous Plants

 

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