Biology, asked by Anonymous, 11 months ago

Cork Cambium
short note​

Answers

Answered by Rifat742
3

Answer:

Cork cambium of woody stem (Tilia). It is different from the main vascular cambium, which is the ring between the wood (xylem) on the inside (top) and the red bast (phloem) outside it.

Cork cambium (pl. cambia or cambiums) is a tissue found in many vascular plants as a part of the epidermis. It is one of the many layers of bark, between the cork and primary phloem. The cork cambium is a lateral meristem and is responsible for secondary growth that replaces the epidermis in roots and stems. It is found in woody and many herbaceous dicots, gymnosperms and some monocots (monocots usually lack secondary growth). It is one of the plant's meristems – the series of tissues consisting of embryonic disk (incompletely differentiated) cells from which the plant grows. The function of cork cambium is to produce the cork, a tough protective material.[1][2]

Explanation:

hope it will help u....

Answered by ItzCUTEstar03
2

\huge\mathbb\red{AnSwEr}\green{:-}

\huge\bold\orange{Cork~Cambium :-}

<center>

Cork cambium is a secondary meristematic tissue .

\huge\pink{→} It is of two layered thickness .

\huge\pink{→} It has the capacity to divide .

\huge\pink{→} It cuts off cells on both the sides .

\huge\pink{→} The outer cells differentiate into cork or phellem .

\huge\pink{→} The inner cells differentiate into secondary cortex or phelloderm .

\huge\green{→} The region between epidermis and steel is called cortex .

Similar questions