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vascular tissue

noun

, Botany.
  1. plant tissue consisting of ducts or vessels, that, in the higher plants, forms the system vascular system by which sap is conveyed through the plant.


vascular tissue

noun

  1. tissue of higher plants consisting mainly of xylem and phloem and occurring as a continuous system throughout the plant: it conducts water, mineral salts, and synthesized food substances and provides mechanical support Also calledconducting tissue
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


vascular tissue

  1. The tissue in vascular plants that circulates fluid and nutrients. There are two kinds of vascular tissue: xylem , which conducts water and nutrients up from the roots, and phloem , which distributes food from the leaves to other parts of the plant. Vascular tissue can be primary (growing from the apical meristem and elongating the plant body) or secondary (growing from the cambium and increasing stem girth). Seedless plants, and nearly all monocotyledons and herbaceous eudicotyledons, have only primary vascular tissue. The evolution of vascular tissue, especially xylem with its rigid water-conducting cells known as tracheids , provided the plant stem with greater support and allowed plants to grow upright to great heights.
  2. See also cambiumSee more at phloem


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Word History and Origins

Origin of vascular tissue1

First recorded in 1805–15
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Example Sentences

In the process of transmuting the mid-rib of the leaf, the plant undergoes a proliferation of new vascular tissue — and avoids rotting while the rest of the leaf withers away.

Tree wounds that penetrate bark damage the cambium layer, vascular tissue that is vital to movement of water and nutrients in a tree.

Dots inside that outline mark where the plant’s vascular tissues, the xylem and phloem, were connected, and conducted fluids between stem and leaf.

When a network of rigid, vascular tissue, called xylem pressurizes, sap starts to flow.

From Salon

Later, Art watches Mercy sleep and notices that a blanket coiled around her wrist “pulsed liked exposed musculature made of a glistening, convoluted network of connective and vascular tissues.”

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vascular rayvasculitis