A vascular cylinder is in the center of as root, the cylinder is made up of both xylem and phloem tissue. The vascular cylinder is surrounded by ground tissue which is surrounded by dermal tissue. A plant will actually absorb a majority of it's water in the dermal tissue just above the root tips. The cells there have tiny projections called root hairs. The three types of plant tissue systems, vascular, ground, and dermal. The vascular tissue system is surrounded by the ground tissue system which is surrounded by the dermal tissue system.
It sends sap to the upper parts of the tree.
stores nutrients for the plant
The stele.
of the Casparian strip, which is a waterproof zone.
I think the answer is b which is vascular cylinder
To transport water from the roots to the leaves the vascular tissue xylem is used.To transport sugars throughout the plant wherever they are needed the vascular tissue phloem is used.
Weeping willows are vascular.
The stele.
The vascular cylinder, also called the stele, is the central core of the root of a vascular plant. It consists of a xylem and a phloem, and associated supporting tissue.
cortex,epidermis,phloem,root hair,vascular cylinder, and the xylem
a mature root has an outside layer, the epidermis, and a central cylinder of vascular tissue.
of the Casparian strip, which is a waterproof zone.
I think the answer is b which is vascular cylinder
To transport water from the roots to the leaves the vascular tissue xylem is used.To transport sugars throughout the plant wherever they are needed the vascular tissue phloem is used.
vascular
vascular
Wheat is monocotyledonous, and is vascular
The vascular bundles are arranged in a loose circle inside the endodermis of a monocot root. In a monocot root, there are eight bundles of xylem and eight bundles of phloem. The phloem forms a cylinder outside of the cylinder of xylem.For more information (and diagrams of a monocot root) see the page links, further down this page, listed under Related Questions and Related Links.
Weeping willows are vascular.