what difference do you find in the dermal tissue of dicot stem and rheo leaf
Answers
Answered by
6
The dermal tissue functions includes plant and able to overcome the injury and water loss.
This is known as most common cell type and includes dermal tissues as the epidermal cell.
In general, it is a thin, waxy, layer called a cuticle covers with epidermal cells and protect them.
It is utilized with epidermal cells.
Answered by
0
You find in the dermal tissue of dicot stem and rheo leaf
- Dermal tissue, which typically consists of a single layer of cells and covers the inner parts of the plant, protects the softest parts of the rheo leaf. The cuticle is a waxy layer that stops water loss.
- The term "dermal tissue" refers to the outer layer of tissue that protects the main body of vascular plants, the epidermis. This contains the seeds, fruits, flowers, stems, leaves, and roots of the plant. The dermal layer normally consists of one layer of densely packed cells and does not contain chloroplasts.
- The plant's dermal tissue covers it, provides protection, and regulates water and gas exchange (in roots). A waxy cuticle protects the dermal tissue of the stems and leaves, preventing water loss by evaporation. Stomata are specialised pores that open up in the cuticle to allow for gas exchange.
- Epidermal cells, which are tightly packed and secrete a waxy coating to help stop water loss, make up the dermal tissue. The majority of the basic plant body is made up of ground tissue. The ground tissue typically contains parenchyma, collenchyma, and sclerenchyma cells.
#SPJ2
Similar questions
Computer Science,
7 months ago
Math,
7 months ago
Math,
7 months ago
Geography,
1 year ago
Social Sciences,
1 year ago
Science,
1 year ago
Science,
1 year ago