BIOLOGY:THE ESSENTIALS (LL) W/CONNECT
BIOLOGY:THE ESSENTIALS (LL) W/CONNECT
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9781260670929
Author: Hoefnagels
Publisher: MCG CUSTOM
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Chapter 21.4, Problem 1MC
Summary Introduction

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The cell layers that occur in the monocot and a eudicot stem from the epidermis to the innermost tissues.

Introduction:

Angiosperms are also known as vascular plants, and these plants differ in the internal anatomy of their main vegetative organs. The two groups: monocots and eudicots account for 97% of all angiosperms.

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Name the cell layers in the stem of a monocot and a eudicot, moving from the epidermis to the innermost tissues.
Sketch observations of monocot stem cross section and the dicot stem cross section. Label the epidermis, phloem, xylem, cortex, and pith or ground tissue
Sketch side by side two daughter cells formed after mitosis of a meristematic cell in the vascular cambium of a eudicot stem. Label the cell formed toward the interior of the stem a meristematic cell. Should the daughter cellformed toward the outside be labeled primary xylem, primary phloem, secondary xylem, or secondary phloem?
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