In a monocot root, the passage cells of the endodermis are characterized by all of the following EXCEPT:
Retention of thin walls with minimal suberin deposition
Location opposite to the protoxylem points
Facilitation of water and mineral transport to the xylem
Thickened Casparian strips on all walls
Related Questions
The large, well-developed pith in a monocot root primarily consists of:
Sclerenchyma cells
Collenchyma cells
Parenchyma cells
Xylem vessels
Which layer in the monocot root is responsible for regulating the passage of water and minerals into the vascular cylinder?
Epidermis
Cortex
Endodermis
Pericycle
Which tissue is immediately present inner to the endodermis in a monocot root?
Pith
Cortex
Pericycle
Phloem
G H Shull observed inbreeding depression in a plant. Miller and Letham isolated a hormone from the immature seeds of that plant. Which of the following characters is not associated with the plant?
Atactostelic condition in stem
Bundle sheath in leaf
Chromosomal number of endospermous cell is 30
Medulla absent in the root
Monocot root differ from dicot root because of
Radial vascular bundle
Large and well-developed pith
Polyarch xylem bundle
Both (b) and (c )
G H Shull observed inbreeding depression in a plant. Miller and Letham isolated a hormone from the immature seeds of that plant. Which of the following characters is not associated with the plant?
Atactostelic condition in stem
Bundle sheath in leaf
Chromosomal number of endospermous cell is 30
Medulla absent in the root
In a monocot root xylem condition is?
Monarch
Triarch
Tetrarch
Polyarch
In monocot roots, the pericycle typically gives rise to:
Lateral roots
Xylem vessels
Phloem tissue
Pith cells
The pith in a monocot root is typically:
large
absent
small
composed of sclerenchyma
Polyarch condition is found in which of the following?
Monocotyledonous stem
Monocotyledonous leaves
Monocotyledonous roots
Dicotyledonous stem