the plant

Rhizomes

Rhizomes are underground stems which grow and branch away from the bamboo plant, thus enabling new territory to be colonized.  Each year, culms arise from the rhizomes to form the aerial parts of the bamboo.  These rhizomes are often so tightly packed that the soil under a bamboo plant seems to be filled with them.  They form a perfectly compact layer roughly 1 meter (3 feet) under the ground.

The growing point of a rhizome is very hard, allowing it to penetrate into the surrounding soil; often it's strong enough to break barriers and travel underground for several meters. 

The true roots of a bamboo develop from the nodes of a rhizome, to supply the bamboo with water and nutrients.  Roots emerge from the node ring, are thinner than the rhizome and are not segmented. 

Rhizomes can be broadly divided into two growth types: pachymorph (sympodial) and leptomorph (monopodial).  The habit of the bamboo grove above the ground is dependent upon the rhizome type, which also determine whether the grove will be invasive or clump forming and it also determines the distances between individual culms. 

Pachymorph rhizomes are typical of tropical bamboos (i.e. genus Bambusa), although also occurr in some temperate bamboos.  The rhizomes are short and thick, curved upwards.  The internodes are very short and look compressed. Above ground, the culms grow close together in a tight clump which expands evenly round its circumference only moving a short distance each year. 

Leptomorph rhizomes are characteristic of bamboos growing in temperate regions and include genera such as Phyllostachys and Pleioblastus. These rhizomes are long and thin, growing horizontally over considerable distances.  Differently from pachimorph rhizomes, both new rhizomes or culms can develop from the dormant buds on the nodes.  The culms are thicker than the rhizome from which they have developed.  Bamboos with monopodial rhizome produce a more open clump structure where the culms have a much greater spacing, often in a straight line away from the mother clump.  These bamboos are invasive and can travel sitances and overcome obstacles.

It shopuld be noted that many species do not exactly follow in any of the two categories of rhizoms.  These intermediate rhizomes structure are typical of the high altitude bamboos where extreme growing condition affect growth behavior, one example is Arundinaria anceps.