Science, asked by dhanaarjun25, 3 months ago

Explain Parenchyma Tissue​

Answers

Answered by MuditVaishnav
2

Answer:

Parenchyma is a form of simple permanent tissue that makes up a significant portion of plant-soil tissues, where other tissues are embedded, such as vascular tissues. These are non-vascular and consist of cells that are basic, living and undifferentiated and are configured to perform different functions.

Characteristics:

They are permanent living tissues that have the capacity to split at maturity and assist in wound regeneration and healing.

As reproductive cells (spores, gametes) are parenchymatous in nature, parenchyma cells are the base of a plant.

A single parenchyma cell fertilized cell has the capacity to develop into an entire plant. These cells are termed as "totipotent" cells.

Parenchyma cells exist as homogeneous parenchyma tissues in the form of continuous masses, such as in the pith and cortex of stems and roots, flesh of succulent fruits, mesophyll of leaves and in the seed endosperm.

To form heterogeneous complex tissues such as xylem and phloem, parenchyma cells can be associated with other cell types.

Parenchyma cells are important for activities such as assimilation, photosynthesis, preservation, secretion, respiration, excretion, and radial transport as water and solvent.

Hope it Helps,

Brainlist please

Answered by 6783gn
2

Parenchyma Tissue are simple permanent tissues. They present in steam , root , leave and flowers of the plant. They also store plant products like resin , gum , ect.

store and aisimilate food and provide mechanical strength.

your answer

Thank you ☺️

Similar questions