Biology, asked by rajeshwaripatgar8788, 4 months ago

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Answered by raobansi123
1

Explanation:

Simple leaves have single leaf blade or lamina while compound leaves have smaller and separate leaf blades called leaflets. The base of a simple leaf contains stipules, but in compound leaf, the stipules are found at the base of the leaf, but other additional structures are absent

Answered by devanayan2005
1

Answer:

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Explanation:

i) The main difference between simple leaf and compound leaf is that the simple leaf has an undivided leaf blade while the leaf blade of a compound leaf is divided into several leaflets. Furthermore, a simple leaf always contains a lateral bud at the base while a compound leaf has no lateral buds at the base of the leaflet.  

Simple leaf and compound leaf are two types of leaves that occur in dicots. The three components of a leaf are the leaf blade or lamina, petiole, and stipule. The leaf blade is the broad portion of the leaf attached to the petiole, which attaches the leaf to the stem. The small bud-like structures at the base of the leaf are the stipules.  

2) In reticulate venation the main veins are branched repeatedly to form a network on the leaf lamina. The main vein is the midrib from which many small veins are formed. Reticulate venation is the characteristic feature of the dicot plants.  E.g. Ficus, Hibiscus. In parallel venation the veins are found lying parallel to each other from the base to the apex. This is a characteristic feature of monocot plants. E.g. Banana, Bamboo.

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