Safranine
Plant tissue contains cell walls while animal tissue contains cell membranes. Plant tissue have chloroplast organelles that are used for photosynthesis, while animal tissue lack these photosynthetic organelles.
ex plant are nothing but the part of plant that can be used for plant tissue culture processes like for the regeneration of hybrid plants and so on .
The basic H & E stain will colour a cross section and longitudinal section very nicely. There are other stains if your looking stain specifics such as the myeline sheath.
Giemsa is the most common stain used to see banding patterns in chromosomes
It depends on what tissue you're looking at, what you want to stain, how the tissue has been stored... Besides very specific staining, there are different types of staining. For example, immunohistochemistry, which uses antibodies to stick coloured stains to cell surface receptors. Or, chemical staining - the most common is H&E staining (haemotoxylin & eosin), so if you're just having fun in a lab and want to see general structures of cells, use this one.
Methylene blue stain is used to stain plant and animal cells.
A chemical used to stain tissue samples for laboratory analysis.
tissue plant growth is the growth of small organism plant and it is used by growing it in a test tube
Plant tissue contains cell walls while animal tissue contains cell membranes. Plant tissue have chloroplast organelles that are used for photosynthesis, while animal tissue lack these photosynthetic organelles.
ex plant are nothing but the part of plant that can be used for plant tissue culture processes like for the regeneration of hybrid plants and so on .
The basic H & E stain will colour a cross section and longitudinal section very nicely. There are other stains if your looking stain specifics such as the myeline sheath.
Both are used in staining but for different purposes .
Xylem is a type of plant tissue.
Giemsa is the most common stain used to see banding patterns in chromosomes
Acetic orcein is used to stain chromosomes in a plant cell so that you can view them easily through a microscope.
It is used to solidify the media.
It depends on what tissue you're looking at, what you want to stain, how the tissue has been stored... Besides very specific staining, there are different types of staining. For example, immunohistochemistry, which uses antibodies to stick coloured stains to cell surface receptors. Or, chemical staining - the most common is H&E staining (haemotoxylin & eosin), so if you're just having fun in a lab and want to see general structures of cells, use this one.