Yes, all plants are green, because plants contains some special organ in them called the chloroplast and in the chloroplast come the chlorophyll which has green pigment in it and that comes out as green.
Another thing is that all plants manufactures their own food and it is done by the help this chlorophyll in the chloroplast it's a green pigment.
This is a relatively recent development. Until a few decades ago, fungi, most of which are not green, were classed as plants. Also, several types of algae of varying colors were once considered plants as well. So 40 years ago, the answer would have been "no."
No not all plants are green
mashrooms or all types of fungi are non green plants
Almost all plants use photosynthesis, even some without chlorophyll. But green plants would not be green if they were not using chlorophyll-based photosynthesis.
Monocotyledons are plants that only have one seed cotyledon. Dicotyledons have to cotyledons. Not all of these plants have to be green plants.
no
By definition, they all have the things that make them plants. They all have cell walls, and all use photosynthesis.
If the question was why are plants green , the answers is because of the clorophile from the leaves .Clorophile is a protein with a more complicated structure that has in in center a molecule Mg (magnesium ) which makes it green and there the plant green .Remember that not all plants are green .
no,photosynthesis do not happen in all plants because all plants do not have cholophyll . plants that are green have cholophyll. so
Chlorophyll like all plants
All omnivores and herbivores eat plants!
All green plants store starch
Yes, all of those organisms categorized as green plants(viridiplantae) use photosynthesis to get and store chemical energy.