because its osmotic presure is greater than of the cell
All tissues are made of cells which are alive making the tissue alive.
Ringer's solution is used to mimic the extracellular fluid environment of tissues, providing nutrients and maintaining the proper pH balance during an experiment. It helps to keep the tissue alive and functioning as it would in the body, allowing for more accurate experimental results.
No, mature phloem tissue is not dead upon maturity. Phloem tissue remains alive and functional, aiding in the transport of sugars and other organic compounds throughout the plant. The cells in mature phloem tissue are specialized for this function and typically stay alive for an extended period.
Ross Harrison
ALL of it.....you want to have a healthy heart to BE alive or to STAY alive
97%
Bones aren't alive, they can't even be described as 'living tissue' any more than hair, toenails, cartilege. Living tissue is skin, muscle, ligaments, and nerves. Blood, urea, sweat, fasces are liquid versions of living tissue.
yUpAdIdOoDaA
yes
Tissue culture refers to the practice of growing or maintaining living cells or tissues in the laboratory. In practice this means anything from keeping a small sample of tissue alive by perfusing with warmed, oxygenated Ringer's solution (think salt and sugar solution with a buffer) to growing whole organs with more complex set ups. Much work is done on cancer cell lines which grow comparatively easily with the right media this technique is sometimes called cell culture. Plant tissue culture is also essential for biotechnological applications and in some cases is used to preserve rare species.
sugar
Yes Jesus when he was in on earth, was hundred percent man and hundred percent god.