the plant

Bamboos are a subfamily of the grasses (fam. Gramineae) counting over 1000 species.  The exact count is difficult because taxonomic classification is based on flower structure and bamboos flower rarely and sometimes at intervals of 120 years, moreover flowers of different species are often hard to distinguish. Bamboos do not always grow in a characteristic way, since the growth form is highly dependent upon the particular site.

Bamboo is an evergreen plant that does not lose its leaves in the autumn. the leaves stay green throughout the average winter, in early spring new leavs grow out and the old ones are gradually lost.

Bamboo is a very hardy and vigorous plant.  Even if the stems and leaves have been severely damaged the plant will usually recover.  After the destructionof Hiroshima by the atomic weapons it was the green bamboo stems that were the first sign of new life.

Another peculiar characteristic is that the young shoots that emerge from the ground have the same diameter at which the bamboo culm will remain throughout theri life, which may be ten years or more.  The lenght that a shoot reaches in its first growth year is also its final lenght.  Young developing bamboo plants produce thicker and taller stems each year, until the clump reaches maturity.  The numebr of branches, however, does increase each year as does the number of leaves.

The main structural part of a bamboo plant are the underground system of rhizomes, the aerial culms and the culm branches.  All of these parts are formed according to the same principle: an alternating series of nodes and internodes. As abamboo grows, each new internode is wrapped in a protective sheat, attached to the preceding node at the sheat ring.  Once the internode has lenghtened, it does not grow any further.  The nodes are massive pieces if tissue, comprising the node ring, the sheat ring and usually a dormant bud.  These dormant buds are the site of emergence of new segmented growth.