Biology, asked by deepal66870, 19 days ago

2. How do the plants and animals differ in growth pattern?

Answers

Answered by ccurry2028
0

Answer:

As young animals mature, all parts of their bodies grow until they reach a genetically determined size for each species. Plant growth, on the other hand, continues throughout the life span of the plant and is restricted to certain meristematic tissue regions only.

Explanation:

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Answered by indu07nov
0

Answer:

- Plants keep growing as long as they live. ... - We know that plants keep growing, but animals stop growing until a certain period; it grows for a definite period and stops. Growth in plants is localized to certain regions such as root, leaves. Growth in animals is diffused, it takes place in body and active regions.

Most plants continue to grow throughout their lives. Like other multicellular organisms, plants grow through a combination of cell growth and cell division. Cell growth increases cell size, while cell division (mitosis) increases the number of cells. ... Once cells differentiate, they can no longer divide.

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