No , pores are not vascular tissue, they are just holes. The vascular tissue of a plant is the xylem and the phloem.
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stomata
stomata is a tiny pores found in the leaves of the plant,but this is not the place where plants take oxygen from,but from the roots.
They can - oxygen is absorbed through pores on the underside of the leaves.
plants have tiny pores called stomata ,found on the underside of leaf. air containing carbon dioxide and oxygen enters the plant through these openings where it gets used in photosynthesis and respiration
Stomata
Nutrients in plants travel up the roots to the leaves through the xylem and phloem. Small pores then release the gases that the plant produces.
Stoma (plural stomata), they are the pores used for gas exchange.
No.
Yes
Plants Carbon Dioxide from air through tiny pores of leaf.These pores are covered with 'Guard Cell'.These pores are called stomata.They are located in plants leaf.It is very easy answer
stomata is a tiny pores found in the leaves of the plant,but this is not the place where plants take oxygen from,but from the roots.
Stomata are a structure found in leaves; only plants have leaves, so only plants have stomata. Mitochondria, however, are organelles found in the cells of all kinds of organisms, not just plants.
plants get air by breathing in air through their pores which are really tiny, that's how plants can breathe.
These pores are called the stomata.
chlororplast
they serve as the breathing organs for plants
CO2 and they breath out oxygen
All Plants get water from therestomata which are tiny pores that open up and get water=}