Plants create their own energy through photosynthesis and are able to absorb nutrients from the soil.
Plants, such as the Venus Flytrap, seem to "eat," but this is due to the low amount of nutrients that they are able to absorb from the soil they live in.
insectivorous, to the contrary are food making plants. However there are at least two flowering plants (I don't recall the names ) are parasitic on other plants especially tomatos and eggplants and don't make food
All plants can make their own food, even those with leaves that are not green
Fruit plants and any other flower plants such as Ipomoea, Sakura (cherry blossom).
Yes. Plants that make their seeds in cones, rather than in flowers. These cone-bearing plants or conifers are also known as gymnosperms. They include trees such as pines. There are also some large tree ferns, such as the New Zealand black tree fern, which can reach heights of 20m. Ferns are not classed as "flowering plants".
An abutilon is any of a variety of tropical flowering plants of the genus Abutilon, such as the flowering maple, Indian mallow, or Chinese lantern.
An antophyte is an alternative name for an anthophyte, a flowering plant or any extinct relative of a flowering plant.
yes I think so as there is flower Any plant with a flower is a flowering plant. Lily's have flowers, so they are flowering plants.
A bignonia is any of the species of the genus Bignonia of flowering plants in the catalpa family.
An acalypha is any of the members of the Acalypha genus of flowering plants in the family Euphorbiaceae.
AnswerBecause we don't do photosynthesisPlants are producers, which means they make their own food. Plants use energy from sunlight to help make their food, but they need chloroplasts to do it. We don't have any because we don't make our own food.
The anthophytes were thought to be a clade comprising plants bearing flower-like structures. The group contained the angiosperms - the extant flowering plants - as well as the Gnetales and the extinct Bennettitales.
Yes, in some pictures of her she if found holding an unidentified flowering branch.