The spaces between leaf veins are called areoles or areolae.
areolae
it is called endodermis
The surface area between the tip and the bottom of a leaf is called the lamina. The lamina is attached to the plant stem by the petiole. The lamina is supported by veins, which carry nutrients to the leaf tissue.
The difference is that reticulate have scattered and parallel have parallel leaf veins
Reticulate venation is where lateral veins radiate away from a central vein towards the leaf margin. The areas between the lateral veins shows strong secondary veins
A leaf with branched veins.
The internode space. The space between the two leafe nodes. The spaces between leaf veins are called areoles.
Doing the crossword in your newspaper??? Areole
it is called endodermis
The patten of veins on a dicot leaf are called netted veins. With netted veins, several main veins begin near the base of the leaf and radiate outward.
The fine network of lines on the undersurface of a leaf are called Veins. The water and minerals go to every part of the leaf through these Veins.
The surface area between the tip and the bottom of a leaf is called the lamina. The lamina is attached to the plant stem by the petiole. The lamina is supported by veins, which carry nutrients to the leaf tissue.
-Broad leaves -Chlorophyll in chloroplasts -Air spaces in their leaves -Veins in the leaves
The difference is that reticulate have scattered and parallel have parallel leaf veins
No. It is absorbed through tiny pores on the surface of the leaf. These are called "stoma". The veins are for moving the tree's sap in the leaves for growth and nourishment.
The petiole is the delivery pipeline between plant stem and leaf vein.
Both have lines.
In plants that have taproot, the veins form a net-like design, on both side of the leaf. This is called reticulate venation. The veins in a leaf transport water, minerals and food, and also provide support to the leaf.