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Figure 35.0 The effect of submersion in water on leaf development in Cabomba. Figure 35.0x The effect of wind on plant form in fir trees. Figure 35.2 Morphology of a flowering plant: an overview. Figure 35.1 A comparison of monocots and dicots. Figure 35.3 Radish root hairs.
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Figure 35.0 The effect of submersion in water on leaf development in Cabomba
Figure 35.4 Modified shoots: Stolons, strawberry (top left); rhizomes, iris (top right); tubers, potato (bottom left); bulb, onion (bottom right)
Figure 35.6 Modified leaves: Tendrils, pea plant (top left); spines, cacti (top right); succulent (bottom left); brightly-colored leaves, poinsettia (bottom right)
Figure 35.6x Lithops, a stone-mimicking plant from South African deserts
Figure 35.12 Locations of major meristems: an overview of plant growth
Figure 35.20 Production of secondary xylem and phloem by the vascular cambium
Figure 35.24 A summary of primary and secondary growth in a woody stem
Figure 36.1 An overview of transport in whole plants (Layer 1)
Figure 36.1 An overview of transport in whole plants (Layer 2)
Figure 36.1 An overview of transport in whole plants (Layer 3)
Figure 36.1 An overview of transport in whole plants (Layer 4)
Figure 36.2 A chemiosmotic model of solute transport in plant cells
Figure 36.3 Water potential and water movement: a mechanical model
Figure 36.6 Compartments of plant cells and tissues and routes for lateral transport
Figure 36.7 Lateral transport of minerals and water in roots
Figure 36.8 Mycorrhizae, symbiotic associations of fungi and roots
Figure 36.10 The generation of transpirational pull in a leaf
Figure 36.12 An open (left) and closed (right) stoma of a spider plant (Chlorophytum colosum) leaf