Biology, asked by tallurigopalarao842, 4 months ago

Trichomes differ from root hairs in being
Unicellular
Unbranched always
Epidermal appendage
Helpful to prevent water loss​

Answers

Answered by minakshi987
0

Answer:

A root hair is the minute structure generally, present on the stem and the roots. It is a tubular outgrowth of a trichoblast, a hair-forming cell on the epidermis of a plant root.

The trichomes often cover the plant body and are the result of divisions of epidermal cells. Trichomes may be either unicellular or multicellular and are either glandular, consisting of a stalk terminating in a glandular head, or nonglandular, consisting of elongated tapering structures.

Guard cells are specialized cells regulating opening and closing of stomata.

Cuticle, collenchyma, and stomata are absent in roots.

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