Asked by logan
dentify the plant tissues in the three images.
A
B
C
3 images of plant tissues are shown. Image A is a layered structure. Image B is a round structure with rings inside. Image C is a scale-like structure.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Here’s the most likely ID for each image (based on your descriptions):
A — Leaf ground tissue (palisade and spongy mesophyll).
- A layered cross‑section with a layer of tall, closely packed cells (palisade) over a looser, air‑filled spongy layer is typical of a leaf.
B — Secondary xylem (wood) — woody stem cross‑section showing growth (annual) rings.
- A round cross‑section with concentric rings is characteristic of wood (secondary xylem) in a woody dicot/stem.
C — Epidermal tissue (e.g., onion epidermis or other scale‑like epidermal cells).
- A scale/brick‑like single cell layer is typical of the epidermis (protective outer layer).
If you can upload the actual images I can confirm or give more specific identifications (e.g., dicot stem vs. root, palisade vs. cuticle/epidermis).
A — Leaf ground tissue (palisade and spongy mesophyll).
- A layered cross‑section with a layer of tall, closely packed cells (palisade) over a looser, air‑filled spongy layer is typical of a leaf.
B — Secondary xylem (wood) — woody stem cross‑section showing growth (annual) rings.
- A round cross‑section with concentric rings is characteristic of wood (secondary xylem) in a woody dicot/stem.
C — Epidermal tissue (e.g., onion epidermis or other scale‑like epidermal cells).
- A scale/brick‑like single cell layer is typical of the epidermis (protective outer layer).
If you can upload the actual images I can confirm or give more specific identifications (e.g., dicot stem vs. root, palisade vs. cuticle/epidermis).
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