I don't know that's why I asked you der
Yes, why not?
yes
Mesophyll
The two main types of mesophyll cells found in plant leaves are palisade mesophyll cells and spongy mesophyll cells. Palisade mesophyll cells are located in the upper layer of the leaf and are specialized for photosynthesis, while spongy mesophyll cells are found beneath the palisade layer and aid in gas exchange and the storage of nutrients.
A mesophyll cell is a plant cell found in the middle layer of leaf tissue. It is responsible for photosynthesis and contains chloroplasts to capture sunlight energy.
Yes. All plant cells have a cellular wall, while animal and bacterial cells have cell membranes.
Yes, leaf mesophyll cells have cytoplasm which contains various organelles like mitochondria, chloroplasts, and ribosomes. Cytoplasm is essential for carrying out various cellular functions within the leaf mesophyll cells.
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)
In a leaf mesophyll cell placed in distilled water, water will move into the cell through osmosis. This is because the cell has a higher solute concentration than the distilled water, creating a concentration gradient that drives the movement of water into the cell.
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.
The Food Making Cell In A Leaf, Is Obviously A Cell Inside A Leaf That Get Their Supply Of Carbon Dioxide Through Tiny Pores (stomata) Which Are Mainly On The Underside Of A Leaf.(:I think that it is the mesophyll cells which contains palisade cells and inter-cellular space