Their are two types of leaves- Iso-bilateral and dorsi-ventral. In isobilateral leaves mesophyll on both sides (dorsal & ventral) remain similar but in dorsiventral leaves it consists of columnar palisade cells on dorsal side and of spongy parenchyma on the ventral side. The spongy parenchyma contains lots of air spaces however in isobilateral leaves the mesophyll may or may not contain the air spaces.
don't know sorry I'm helping my son doing his School Homework
yes. leaf cells have vacuoles
yes it does
no
Yes, why not?
net movement is in, cell will not burst as cell contains cell wall, but the cell will be very turgid.
The region in the leaf that has air spaces to facilitate the movement of gasses is the mesophyll region. This region is composed of layers of cells.
A palisade cell is a plant cell. These cells are found immediately below the upper epidermis of a leaf and form the mesophyll layer. Palisade cells are closely packed together and have many chloroplasts in order to absorb maximum amount of sunlight in order to maximize the process of photosynthesis.
Mosaic leaf structureThin leaf laminaAbundance of mesophyll cell with chloroplastDeep and wide roots
Yes, why not?
yes
they are the objects inside a cross-section of a leaf which are loosley packed cells that give the leaf a spongy appearence.
Waxy cuticle, Palisade cells, spongy mesophyll, vascular bundle (xylem, phloem). Plant cell : Nucleus, vacuole, cytoplasm, centriole, lysosomes, cell membrane, cell wall. etc etc.
what type of plant cell would you expect to find in the photosynthetic tissue of a leaf?
Mesophyll
I don't know that's why I asked you der
Yes, a leaf mesophyll has a cytoplasm.
it is chloroplasm
A cell wall, chloroplasts, a nucleus, and a vacuole which is in a leaf cell and just to let you know the chloroplasts make the leaf green.
Through the stomata, and dissolved at the moist cell membrane of the spongy mesophyll cell.
In the middle of the leaf, in line with the xylem cells (under the palisade cells but above the stomata)