Pine trees are vascular plants because these have well defined xylem and phloem tissues.
Trees are vascular in structure.
are fir trees vascular
yes, they are vascular plants
The white pine (Pinus strobus) used to be call the "mast pine" as it was the wood of choice for the mast of tall sailing ships. Vascular means "tubes that carry fluid". In humans these are the veins and arteries. In plants, they are called xylem and phloem, and pine trees do have these tubes to carry & distribute water, nutrients, leaf products, etc. An example of a nonvascular plant would be "lower plants" such as algae and bryophytes.
They are vascular because they grow seeds like other fruit bearing plants LIKE SUNFLOWERS AND PECH TREES BILL SO STUPID
this plant is vascular or nonvascular
vascular- most nonvascular plants are small grass type plates that don't have phloem and xylem
All true trees are vascular because they have roots, a stem, and leaves.
no it is not, it is a vascular plant
Is a dandelion a vascular or nonvascular plant
nonvascular
these people are wrong its vascular