la pianta  [versione in italiano disponibile prossimamente]

branches

In most genera the branches appear only after the main culm has completed its elongation, however, in other genera such as Phyllostachys and Semiarundinaria, the branches appear as the culm elongates. In some genera the branches start developing from the top down, in other it is the way around. Genera like Sasa, Sasaella and Pseudosasa grow branches only in the upper part of the culm, in others branches appear all along the culm, this however also depends on the intesnsity of light received.

The number of branches at the node (branching pattern) is an important taxonomic characteristic in identifying bamboos, although there is some variation.  Sasa species have only one branch per node, and this is true also for Pseudosasa and Sasaella (which may occasionally have two or three branches).  Phyllostachys usually has two, a stronger branch and a smaller one about two.thirds the lenght.  There is sometimes a third, even smaller branch between the two.  In Phyllostachys, well grown plants occasionally have only a single branch on some lower nodes.  Pleioblastus, Semiarundinaria, Sinobambusa and Chimonobambusa have three branches per node; Arundinaria and Sinarundinaria three to six branches; Dendrocalamus and Bambusa seven to nine.  Some Sinarundinaria have many thin branches and Chusquea has a whorl of up to 50 branches surrounding each node.