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- Why do plants have pith and how is it useful to them?
Many plants have pith, from walnut trees to corn to ragweed, but I can't think of anything it does them What is pith and how is it useful to them?
- plant anatomy - why monocot roots have a wide pith while dicot roots . . .
Normally dicot roots have a nartow pith at the center but monocot roots have a wide pith Is there any specific reason to this?
- Which part of oranges contain fiber? - Biology Stack Exchange
I think it's pith, but here (non-english country) many chef suggest orange's vascular veins which look "fibrous" and have similar translated word with "fiber" itself Please enlighten me which?
- botany - If only dicots have pith, what is the foam in the middle of . . .
I've heard that the only plants that have pith are dicots, because of the shape of their vascular bundle If that is true, what is the foam inside of the corn plants, which are monocots?
- genetics - Calculating pitch of B-DNA - Biology Stack Exchange
From this question (How pitch of a DNA Helix is 3 4 nm?), I've learnt that for counting the number of axial rise for 10 base pairs in 1 helical turn to measure the pitch of B-DNA, we have to includ
- botany - What is vascular cambium? - Biology Stack Exchange
Intrafascicular and vascular cambium is the same Intrafascicular is primary meristem but interfascicular is secondary as it developed from pith ray
- How pitch of a DNA Helix is 3. 4 nm? - Biology Stack Exchange
How pitch of a DNA Helix is 3 4 nm? In the image that I have attached, the numbers with prime represent the number of base pair and normal numbers represent the number of gap elements between two b
- botany - What are pit fields? - Biology Stack Exchange
I found this statement from my biology text book, "The sieve tube elements and the companion cells are connected by pit fields present between the common longitudinal walls" Is the pit field sam
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