I am bad at science! Sorry!
The tissue beneath the epidermis that makes up the majority of the plant is called the mesophyll. It is responsible for photosynthesis and gas exchange in the plant. The mesophyll is composed of two layers: the palisade mesophyll and the spongy mesophyll.
The spongy layer is located beneath the upper epidermis in the mesophyll tissue of plant leaves. It is made up of loosely packed cells with air spaces between them, allowing for gas exchange and photosynthesis to occur more efficiently.
A leaf typically has three main types of tissues: epidermal tissue, mesophyll tissue, and vascular tissue. The epidermal tissue covers the outer surface of the leaf, the mesophyll tissue is where photosynthesis occurs, and the vascular tissue is responsible for transporting nutrients and water throughout the leaf.
A plant that is not vascular does not have xylem or phloem to carry nutrients throughout the plant. The non vascular plants have a simpler transport system established for water and nutrients required.
The blood-forming tissue housed inside spongy bone is called red bone marrow. It is responsible for producing red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets through a process called hematopoiesis.
"ground" or "ground tissue"
The "ground" or "ground tissue" is plant tissue is not epidermis or vascular tissue.
In a leaf,a most of the chloroplasts are found in the upper epidermis layer. A leaf has four distinct tissue layers, upper epidermis, lower epidermis, spongy layer, and palisade layer.
Mesophyll In between upper and lower epidermis of leaf is mesophyll tissue. In the dorsiventral leaves, mesophyll is divisible into upper palisade cells and lower spongy parenchyma. The palisade cells are mainly involved in photosynthesis and spongy parenchyma in gaseous exchange.
Endosteum tissue lines the openings in spongy bone.
The tissue beneath the epidermis that makes up the majority of the plant is called the mesophyll. It is responsible for photosynthesis and gas exchange in the plant. The mesophyll is composed of two layers: the palisade mesophyll and the spongy mesophyll.
The spongy layer is located beneath the upper epidermis in the mesophyll tissue of plant leaves. It is made up of loosely packed cells with air spaces between them, allowing for gas exchange and photosynthesis to occur more efficiently.
A leaf typically has three main types of tissues: epidermal tissue, mesophyll tissue, and vascular tissue. The epidermal tissue covers the outer surface of the leaf, the mesophyll tissue is where photosynthesis occurs, and the vascular tissue is responsible for transporting nutrients and water throughout the leaf.
A plant that is not vascular does not have xylem or phloem to carry nutrients throughout the plant. The non vascular plants have a simpler transport system established for water and nutrients required.
The spongy bone tissue weighs less.
No, there is not dense connective tissue in the epidermis. There is loose connective tissue right below the epidermis (areolar connective tissue).
the three types of plant tissue are : Dermal Tissue Dermal tissue covers the outside of a plant in a single layer of cells called the epidermis. You can think of the epidermis as the plant's skin. It mediates most of the interactions between a plant and its environment. Epidermal cells secrete a waxy substance called cuticle, which coats, waterproofs, and protects the above ground parts of plant. Cuticle helps prevent water loss, abrasions, infections, and damage from toxins. Ground Tissue Ground tissue makes up much of the interior of a plant and carries out basic metabolic functions. Ground tissue in stems provides support and may store food or water. Ground tissues in roots may also store food. Vascular Tissue Vascular tissue runs through the ground tissue inside a plant. It consists of xylem and phloem, which transport fluids. Xylem and phloem are packaged together in bundles.