Biology, asked by ayushrock007, 3 months ago

what is a tissue ? ​


ravalikamounika: group of cells is called a tissue
ayushrock007: too short but ok

Answers

Answered by pankaj21584
2

Answer:

A group of cells similar in structure performing similar functions called tissue......

Answered by manyasingh9819
3

it may help you mark me as the brianliest please

Explanation:

tissue, in biology, is defined as a group of cells that possess a similar structure and perform a specific function. The word tissue originates from French, which means “to weave.”

Tissues Types

In animals, there are 4 types of tissues, namely:

Muscle tissue (cardiac, skeletal and smooth muscle tissues)

Connective tissue (cartilage, blood, bone)

Nervous tissue (neurons and neuroglia)

Epithelial tissue (simple epithelium, simple cuboidal, simple columnar epithelium, etc)

Plants have their own set of tissues, namely:

Dermal Tissues (epidermal cells, stomata, trichomes)

Ground tissues (Collenchyma, parenchyma, sclerenchyma)

Vascular tissue (Vessel elements, tracheids, companion cells and sieve tubes)

Concept of Tissues

The concept of tissues can be traced back to 1801 when it was introduced by Xavier Bichat, a French anatomist and pathologist. He had proposed that tissues are a central element in human anatomy, concluding that organs are essentially a collection of distinct this

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