Examples of simple leaf in the following topics:
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- Leaves may be simple or compound .
- In a simple leaf, such as the banana leaf, the blade is completely undivided.
- Leaves may be simple or compound.
- In simple leaves, the lamina is continuous.
- (a) The banana plant (Musa sp.) has simple leaves.
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- Each leaf typically has a leaf blade called the lamina, which is also the widest part of the leaf.
- The edge of the leaf is called the margin .
- Within each leaf, the vascular tissue forms veins.
- The arrangement of veins in a leaf is called the venation pattern.
- A leaf may seem simple in appearance, but it is a highly-efficient structure.
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- One simple graph, thestem-and-leaf graphorstemplot, comes from the field of exploratory data analysis.It is a good choice when the data sets are small.
- The leaf consists of a final significant digit.
- For example, 23 has stem 2 and leaf 3.
- Four hundred thirty-two (432) has stem 43 and leaf 2.
- The decimal 9.3 has stem 9 and leaf 3.
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- It produces oxygen and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P or GA3P), simple carbohydrate molecules that are high in energy and can subsequently be converted into glucose, sucrose, or other sugar molecules.
- Though the equation looks simple, it is carried out through many complex steps.
- The stomata are typically located on the underside of the leaf, which minimizes water loss.
- The basic equation for photosynthesis is deceptively simple.
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- Jain illustrated manuscripts, originally painted on palm leaf, were characterized by sharp outlines and depictions of Jain saviors.
- Painted on palm leaf, these illustrations rely on sharp outlines for effect, becoming progressively more angular and wiry until barely a trace of naturalism is left.
- The earliest illustrations are simple icons in small panels, but they gradually become more elaborate, depicting scenes from the lives of various Tirthankaras in detail.
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- A basic stem-and-leaf display contains two columns separated by a vertical line.
- This can be done most easily, if working by hand, by constructing a draft of the stem-and-leaf display with the leaves unsorted, then sorting the leaves to produce the final stem-and-leaf display.
- The stem-and-leaf display is drawn with two columns separated by a vertical line.
- This allows the stem-and-leaf plot to retain its shape, even for more complicated data sets:
- This is an example of a stem-and-leaf display for EPA data on miles per gallon of gasoline.
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- The outermost layer of the leaf is the epidermis.
- The cuticle reduces the rate of water loss from the leaf surface.
- Other leaves may have small hairs (trichomes) on the leaf surface.
- Leaf trichomes include (b) branched trichomes on the leaf of Arabidopsis lyrata and (c) multibranched trichomes on a mature Quercus marilandica leaf.
- Stomata on the leaf underside allow gas exchange.
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- Intercalary meristems occur only in monocots at the bases of leaf blades and at nodes (the areas where leaves attach to a stem).
- This tissue enables the monocot leaf blade to increase in length from the leaf base; for example, it allows lawn grass leaves to elongate even after repeated mowing.
- Plant tissues are either simple (composed of similar cell types) or complex (composed of different cell types).
- Dermal tissue, for example, is a simple tissue that covers the outer surface of the plant and controls gas exchange.
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- The stem and other plant organs are primarily made from three simple cell types: parenchyma, collenchyma, and sclerenchyma cells.
- They are found in the stem, the root, the inside of the leaf, and the pulp of the fruit.
- The epidermis of a leaf also contains openings, known as stomata, through which the exchange of gases takes place .
- Two cells, known as guard cells, surround each leaf stoma, controlling its opening and closing and, thus, regulating the uptake of carbon dioxide and the release of oxygen and water vapor.
- Both are considered complex plant tissue because they are composed of more than one simple cell type that work in concert with each other.
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- The level of intricacy can vary from simple to highly ornate depending on the skill and intent of the carver.
- The use of the medium outside of book illustrations for fine art, or "single-leaf" prints, was relatively unpopular from about 1550 to the late nineteenth century, when interest was renewed.
- The back of the paper or cloth is then rubbed either by hand, or with a simple tool like a spoon or a roller.
- In both Japanese and European woodcuts, black ink prints were generally used for book illustrations, while color was reserved for single-leaf prints.