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Yes, a leaf is considered an organ. It is made of several types of tissues, so it cannot be tissue itself.
A decomposing leaf is dead, however it was at one time alive.
A vacuole is a small cavity in the tissue of an organism containing air and fluids. Carbon dioxide is allowed to enter a leaf through vacuoles.
why is the food-making tissue at the leaf surface why
Epidermal tissue.
mayb
Yes, a leaf is considered an organ. It is made of several types of tissues, so it cannot be tissue itself.
A decomposing leaf is dead, however it was at one time alive.
A vacuole is a small cavity in the tissue of an organism containing air and fluids. Carbon dioxide is allowed to enter a leaf through vacuoles.
why is the food-making tissue at the leaf surface why
A tissue.
why is the food-making tissue at the leaf surface why
An tissue
Protective tissue
Epidermal tissue.
Arthropods, microorganisms, and worms are what eats away at decomposing leaves.Specifically, decomposing leaves contain carbon and other nutrients attractive to decomposers and scavengers. Among the most important of the decomposing leaf-eaters number such arthropods as dung beetles and ground-dwelling bugs. Microorganisms such as bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and viruses specialize in eating away at ground litter.
leaf