no there is no cambium present in monocot roots.
The main function of cambium is to have secondary growth. Since true secondary growth is absent in monocot, these are devoid of cambium.
Monocot stems have most of their vascular bundles near the outside edge of ... Dicot secondary growth occurs by growth of vascular cambium, .
No, monocots do not have vascular cambium
The vascular cambium adds to secondary xylem and secondary phloem while the cork cambium gives rise to cork and secondary cortex. The vascular cambium is a remnant of the apical meristem while the cork cambium is a true secondary meristem which develops outside the vascular tissues.
They are neither. Monocots and dicots a vascular plants a liverwort is non vascular
woody stems have more xylem than soft stems
The advantage of having a vascular cambium in plants is that it makes the plants compete better for light.
i think it is vascular cambium layer............ :)
vascular cambium produces secondary phloes and secondary xylem. interfascicular cambium are been between vascular bundles in near stems.
The vascular cambium adds to secondary xylem and secondary phloem while the cork cambium gives rise to cork and secondary cortex. The vascular cambium is a remnant of the apical meristem while the cork cambium is a true secondary meristem which develops outside the vascular tissues.
Vascular cambium cells get energy from food supplied by ploem cells
They are neither. Monocots and dicots a vascular plants a liverwort is non vascular
The monocots like the maize produce the cork cambium monocot.
Herbaceous stems lack woody tissue and growth rings unlike woody xylem. Wood is a composite of cellulose fibers which require the the process of phloem in the bark to contain nutrients unlike herbaceous stems that rely on xylem that contains vessel and vascular elements.
woody stems have more xylem than soft stems
The advantage of having a vascular cambium in plants is that it makes the plants compete better for light.
The function of vascular cambium in dicots is to give rise to new vascular tissue.
i think it is vascular cambium layer............ :)
cork cambium, apical meristem, and vascular cambium.
Between the primary xylem and the primary phloem.