Reticulate venation is the arrangement in which the veins of the leaf cross each other around the midrib. It may be unicostate or multicostate depending on the number of mid-ribs and lobes of the leaf. In some cases this venation is convergent and in others it is divergent type.
Yes, it has a Reticulate Venation.
Reticulate venation
Yes, Tulsi plant leaves typically have reticulate venation, which means the veins branch off from a central midrib and form a network throughout the leaf. This pattern helps in the efficient transport of water, minerals, and nutrients within the leaf.
Reticulate venation: The veins are in the form of a network. Leaves of dicotyledonous plants have reticulate venation.
no,maize have parallel venation in leaves
the venation of the plant mostly depend on the roots if a plant has fibrous roots the venation will be parallel, but if the plant has tap root the venation will bereticulate and since gram has tap root it maybe having reticulate venation.
The holy Basel (tulsi) leaves have reticulate venation
No, marigold has reticulate venation in its leaves.
Chikoo leaf has reticulate venation. Reticulate venation is a type of venation pattern in leaves where the veins form a network of interconnected veins throughout the leaf blade. This is in contrast to parallel venation, where the veins run parallel to each other along the length of the leaf. Chikoo leaves typically exhibit a reticulate venation pattern.
Dicotyledonous leaf have reticulate venation and monocotyledonous leaf have parallel venation.
Cucumber leaves exhibit reticulate venation, where the veins form a network pattern that branches out across the leaf surface.
Ficus being a dicot plant has reticulate venation in the leaves.