Overview


SpeciesAllium tuberosum Rottler ex Spreng.
GenusAllium
SubfamilyAllioideae
FamilyAmaryllidaceae
CommonNamegarlic chives, Oriental garlic, Asian chives, Chinese chives, Chinese leek
Taxonomy ID4683
Chromosome2–4x, 8x, x=8

Description


Allium tuberosum (garlic chives, Oriental garlic, Asian chives, Chinese chives, Chinese leek) is a species of plant native to the Chinese province of Shanxi, and cultivated and naturalized elsewhere in Asia and around the world.
Allium tuberosum is a rhizomatous, clump-forming perennial plant growing from a small, elongated bulb (about 10 mm; 13⁄32 inch, across) that is tough and fibrous. Unlike either onion or garlic, it has strap-shaped leaves with triangular bases, about 1.5 to 8 mm (1⁄16 to 5⁄16 in) wide. It produces many white flowers in a round cluster (umbel) on stalks 25 to 60 cm (10 to 24 in) tall. It grows in slowly expanding perennial clumps, but also readily sprouts from seed. In warmer areas (USDA zone 8 and warmer), garlic chives may remain green all year round. In cold areas (USDA zones 7 to 4b), leaves and stalks completely die back to the ground, and resprout from roots or rhizomes in the spring. [From Wiki]


Transcriptome assembly


AssemblyGene numberPercent GCContig N50BUSCOdataSearch genes
Allium tuberosum51371236.91928C:89.9%[S:75.5%,D:14.4%]PRJNA673978,PRJNA989054,PRJNA310799GO!