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PLANTAE
Catalog No. Description Price/Each
ANGIOSPERMS (MONOCOT VS. DICOT)
The slides listed here are designed to illustrate fundamental anatomical differences between the two major divisions of the flowering plants:
the Monocotyledoneae
and the Dicotyledoneae.
ML1118 Stems, c.s.
Typical monocot and dicot stems show variation in arrangement of conductive tissue.
$ 8.15
ML1119 Roots, c.s.
Sections through typical monocot and dicot roots.
8.60
ML1120 Leaves, c.s.
Demonstrate leaf anatomy variation with sections from monocot and dicot leaves.
11.15
ML1121 Leaf epidermis, w.m.
Epidermal layers from representative monocot and dicot leaves.
7.95
ANGIOSPERMS (DICOT: STEMS)
ML1125 Herbaceous and woody stems, c.s.
Sections of both on one slide.
$ 9.40
ML1141 Tilia, c.s.
Composite of one-, two-, and three-year stems and older on one slide.
11.05
ANGIOSPERMS (DICOT: LEAVES)
ML1148 Hydro-, meso-, and xerophytic leaves, c.s.
Composite slide to demonstrate leaf adaptation to environments characterized by
varying degrees of moisture.
$11.85
ML1151 Sedum leaf, w.m.
Stonecrop, preparation of leaf epidermis with stomata.
7.55
ML1152 Syringa vulgaris, c.s.
Lilac, section of leaf and midrid.
8.15
ANGIOSPERMS (MONOCOT: STEMS)
ML1157 Elodea canadensis, c.s.
Section through hydrophytic stem.
$6.80
ML1158 Elodea, l.s.
Non-median section of stem tip to show leaf development.
8.75
ML1159 Zea mays, c.s.
Section through mature stem.
6.45
ANGIOSPERMS (MONOCOT: ROOTS)
ML1162 Allium cepa, l.s.
Section through root-tip for mitosis, iron–alum hematoxylin and orange stain.
$ 9.95
ML1163 Allium, l.s.
Section through root-tip for mitosis, quadruple stain.
12.00
ANGIOSPERMS (MONOCOT: LEAVES)
ML1167 Allium cepa, w.m.
Onion, bulb scale (leaf) epidermis to show simple cell structure.
$6.55
ML1168 Allium, w.m.
Leaf epidermis with stomata.
7.75
ML1170 Elodea canadensis, w.m.
Whole mount representative hydrophytic leaf. Compare to Aloe, above.
7.45
ML1171 Zea mays, c.s.
Section through leaf blade with motor cells.
6.50
ANGIOSPERMS (MONOCOT: FLOWERS AND DEVELOPMENT)
ML1175 Lilium, c.s.
Anthers with first meiotic divisions.
$11.60
Monocot vs. Dicot—
Compariset™
Four composite slides selected
to vividly illustrate the fundamental
differences between
those two sub-groups of the
flowering plants. Cross sections
of stems, roots, leaves, and
flower buds contrast vascular
tissue—arranged in a ring in
dicots and scattered bundles in
monocots; leaf veins—branched
in dicots and parallel in monocots;
and flower parts—dicots
with four or five or multiples
thereof and monocots with
three or multiples thereof.
Catalog No. ML1394
Description Monocot vs.
Dicot—
Compariset™
Price/Each $29.70
MICROSCOPE SLIDES continued on next page.
Microscope Slides, continued
Roots and Stems—
Compariset™
Compare the root and stem
structures of a representative
monocot (Zea mays,
corn) and a representative
dicot (Ranunculus acris, the
buttercup). Root and stem
cross sections of each plant
comprise the four slides
included. Students can closely
examine and compare the
arrangements
of the vascular
bundles (conductive tissues) in
the two major groups of flowering
plants.
Catalog No. ML1419
Description Roots and Stems—
Compariset™
Price/Each $27.60
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