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Can you please give me simple and short answers please. Also no need for explana

ID: 203327 • Letter: C

Question

Can you please give me simple and short answers please. Also no need for explanation. Laboratory Review 19 1. How would you distinguish between a monocot and eudicot plant based on leaf vein pattern? 2. How is meristem different from all other types of plant tissue? 3. Show that a root has epidermal. ground, and vascular tissue by using these terms to label this illustration b. Root 4. In which zone of a eudicot root would you expect to find mature vascular tissue? Explain. 5. In a eudicot root, what structural feature allows the endodermis to regulate the entrance of water and materials into the vascular cylinder, where xylem and phloem are located? 6. What type of root does a carrot have? 7. How would you microscopically distinguish a eudicot stem from a monocot stem? 8. Compare how primary and secondary growth of a woody stem arises and the type of growth that results 9. Contrast how you could determine one year's growth by looking at a winter twig with how you determine one year's growth in a cross section of a woody tree stem. a. What type of leaf tissue produces glucose? b. How does glucose exit a leaf? c. Where is glucose stored in a plant such as a carrot? 10. McGraw-Hill Access Science Website LEARNSMART BEd Antoninidesaboratoian, pelunngvideos, thatcan online encyclopedia of science and technology that provides information, including videos, that can LABS BIOLOGY enhance the laboratory experience. The following LearnSmart Labs contain exercises that are related to the content Find even more resources to learn the www.accessscience.com

Explanation / Answer

Here are the short and crisp answers to each of your question -

1) monocot leaves - generally parallel venation and simple leaves
eudicot leaves - generally netted venation and compound leaves

2) meristematic tissue is 'undifferentiated', therefore responsible for growth and can differentiated into other plant tissues, other plant tissues are differentiated and hence do specific functions.

3) In the diagram- a. Vascular tissue
b. Ground tissue
c. Epidermal tissue

4) Zone of Maturation. Because that is the zone where all the root tissues get maturated. Root tip, zone of cell division and zone of elongation does not have completely mature vascular tissue.

5) Casparian strips allow to regulate flow of water and material across the epidermis.

6) Carrot has a tap root system

7) Eudicot stem has pith but monocot stem does not.
Eudicot stem has vascular and cork cambium which results in secondary growth, they also show annual rings.
Monocots don't show that. Plus monocots have scattered vascular bundles hence easily identifiable.

8) Primary growth -> vertical growth of the stem, happens due to apical meristem
Secondary growth -> increase in girth of the stem, happens due to s lateral meristem

9) Winter twigs form bud (apical/axillary) scales in winter and these scales fall off in spring leaving a bud scar on the twig. Therefore distance between two bud scars will give you one year (vertical) growth of the stem.
Woody tree stem forms annual rings due to differential water availability in summer and winters. Therefore distance between two annual rings will give you one year (lateral) growth of the stem.

10)
a) the one with large number of chloroplast will produce glucose. Therefore, Mesophyll tissue (parenchyma region between upper and lower epidermis) will produce glucose in plants.
b) Glucose produced in leaves is transported to phloem and the phloem transports it outside the leaf.
c) In carrots the glucose is stored in the roots. Organelles such amyloplasts are used for synthesis and storage of starch.