Venation is how a the leaf veins are organized. Netted venation is when there are larger veins with many smaller veins branches making a type of web pattern.
Net venation in leaves is when vascular tissue (the veins, or vascular bundles) branch out and rebranch throughout the leaf. It is normally seen in dicots.
Venation is the arrangement of veins in an insect's wing or the leaf of a plant. Such venation is said to be netted if the smaller vessels branch from the larger ones either as in a feather or like the fingers of a hand. Please see the link.
I think it is how the veins are formed, for example: Pinnate venation has one main vain going through the leaf, and other veins branching out. There is also palmate, parallel, and netted. Hope I helped!
Parallel venation is the term used to describe the arrangement of leaf veins in monocotyledonous plants. The veins are arranged parallel to each other, thus parallel venation (as opposed to the branched or net venation of dicotyledonous plants)
Sketch a net of it and then work out the area of each of its 5 netted components and then add them together
der r no many trees in cities try for banana nd coconut tree if u want 2 jus c it
I think the watermelon is a dicot, so the leaf venation will be reticulated, or netted.
netted
pinately netted
netted
pinately netted
It is reticulate type.
Alternate phyllotaxy
pinately netted
netted
The two types of netted venation arrangements are pinnate venation, where the veins run parallel to each other along the midrib of the leaf, and palmate venation, where the veins radiate outward from a single point at the base of the leaf.
Venation is the arrangement of veins in an insect's wing or the leaf of a plant. Such venation is said to be netted if the smaller vessels branch from the larger ones either as in a feather or like the fingers of a hand. Please see the link.
The venation pattern of sampaguita leaves is known as pinnate venation, where the veins extend from the midrib to the edges of the leaf in a feather-like pattern.