Biology, asked by sudheer8448, 1 year ago

difference Between pole and seedling stage​

Answers

Answered by nyaosiemo27
1

Answer:

Difference bettwen Pole & Seedling Stage

Explanation:

There are six stages of a tree, first the seedling stage, sapling, poles, mature trees, old trees, and lastly overgrown trees. The seedling stage is the first stage of the growth cycle that develops up to a sapling to make a forest while sapling is the second stage where the seedling is 1 meter tall while the stem is about 7 centimeters. The Pole stage is the third stage of the growth cycle where poles are around 7cm to 30 cm in, which grow very fast to heights of a house. Mature trees come at the fourth stage.

Answered by KajalBarad
0

The difference between pole stage and seedling stage of a seed is as follows:

Pole: A young tree is defined as pole when the lower branches begin to fall off and the rate of height growth begins to slow and crown expansion becomes noticeable.

Between the thicket and maturity stages, the young trees resemble poles. This is from the first thinning to about 50 years for broadleaves.

Seedling: A seedling is a young sporophyte that develops from a seed embryo. Seedling development begins with seed germination. The radicle (embryonic root), the hypocotyl (embryonic shoot), and the cotyledons are the three main parts of a typical young seedling (seed leaves).

The seed absorbs water, triggering enzymes that initiate the growth process. The embryo grows in size and length. The embryo penetrates the seed's covering layers. The meristem of the root The plant tissue responsible for growth, the meristem, is activated, and the embryonic root (radicle) pushes through.

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