Yes, but it's in a good way. The water cycle actually allows the plant to grow. This is how the water cycle helps the plant: when it rains the plant's roots suck up the water and nutrients, then the nutrients goes through the plant and makes food for the plant to eat.
Yes. It helps them survive and grow, as well as sunlight.
well how should explain.................the are grounded by roots so when you put water on the plant the, plant sucks it up
Habitat
Abiotic factors are non living things like water, soil, temperature, and rocks. Pathogen levels are one abiotic factor that affects honey bees causing colony deaths. Temperature is another abiotic factor that affects honey bees.
In a ecosystem in foodchains in relationships.
A plant's adaptations for floating in water are floating leaves and finely dissected leaves. These plants can only grow in water or in soil that is always saturated with water.
Transpiration is water loss from plants.
CO2 is taken up by plants and is converted (with water) into sugars and O2.
Jellyfish live side by side with plants in the ocean. They do not really do not interact with plants outside of eating some plants.
All living things interact with the ecosystem in which they live.
landing on them
interact
Phospholipids do not interact with water, because water is polar and lipids are nonpolar.
adapt to counter extreme weather like water retention/storage or heat dissipation
It gives the plants rain for them to grow and it also provides us the water we need to survive or to keep us hydrated. NO
I dont know how carboyhydrates and lipids interact with water.
because animals love plants
they interact by precipitation . when the sun precipitates water in the ocean
they interact by precipitation . when the sun precipitates water in the ocean