Science, asked by 1990tabassumansari, 4 months ago

how growth pattern of plant is different from animal growth pattern​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
6

Answer:

Plants differ from animals in their manner of growth. 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.

Answered by BrainlySamrat
2

Explanation:

Plants differ from animals in their manner of growth. 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.

Primary growth is the upward growth of the stem and the downward growth of the roots. It is the type of growth that makes a plant longer. Some plants experience an additional type of growth called secondary growth, which occurs in plants known as dicots, such as trees, shrubs, and vines.

The growth of animals is more restricted in time than is that of plants, but cell division is more generally distributed throughout the body of the organism. ... Cell division and size increase continue, however, even after increase in total body size no longer occurs.

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