want to smoke with me baby and i will grow my roots inside of you ;) and we can flower babies everywhere
yes, plants can grow there roots back, but it has to be the full plant. Not a flower, fruit, bud, etc. You have to keep it in a cup or vase filled with water. It may take a while but eventually the roots will start growing back. I am currently helping a plant grow it's roots back. It was dying, so I cut it in half. I put the top in water and after about a week it is growing back and greener than ever. I give it new water ever other day and make sure it doesn't get dusty. Sometimes I have to take the dead plant off of the base so the roots can grow past it. Very fun, you get attached to it.
Prairie plants roots, like all plant roots, move water and nutrients from the soil into the plant. Because prairie habitat is often dry the root systems are huge. In any natural prairie these plant roots partner with mycorrhizal fungi creating a fungus root that further increases the root zone by a factor of 10 to 1000. The roots remain in the soil. If the plant dies the roots become organic matter cycled back to other plants. If the plant is burned in the frequent grass fires the prairie often sees the plant regrows from the roots left in the soil.
as long as it is taken care of it will live long but in the winter if the roots are left in they will come back in the summer.
A "stem" is a part of a plant. It is a vascular structure that supports heaves or flowers and connects these to the roots of the plant. It also sends the sugar that the plant makes up to the leaves for photosynthesis
Water evaporates from the plant all the time.
Yes
if the original plant was female then the next will be also
yes, plants can grow there roots back, but it has to be the full plant. Not a flower, fruit, bud, etc. You have to keep it in a cup or vase filled with water. It may take a while but eventually the roots will start growing back. I am currently helping a plant grow it's roots back. It was dying, so I cut it in half. I put the top in water and after about a week it is growing back and greener than ever. I give it new water ever other day and make sure it doesn't get dusty. Sometimes I have to take the dead plant off of the base so the roots can grow past it. Very fun, you get attached to it.
Prairie plants roots, like all plant roots, move water and nutrients from the soil into the plant. Because prairie habitat is often dry the root systems are huge. In any natural prairie these plant roots partner with mycorrhizal fungi creating a fungus root that further increases the root zone by a factor of 10 to 1000. The roots remain in the soil. If the plant dies the roots become organic matter cycled back to other plants. If the plant is burned in the frequent grass fires the prairie often sees the plant regrows from the roots left in the soil.
it depends on the plant. Dandelions for example reproduce by having their seeds scattered. However most plants reproduce by their roots, so if you take away a plant, but leave the roots, there is a good chance that i will grow back.
A banana is not a tree, it is a herbaceous plant. This means that it has the characteristic of a herb and above all as a flowering plant, it does not produce woody tissue and dies back at the end of each growing season
Depends on the size of the root and to what extremes. Many times if plants fail you can trim back the roots and rejuvenate it so it will grow new roots. Injured roots will usually come back stronger as long as its not from anything other than mishandling or cutting by a shovel.
yes they will grow back just keep them in high quality h20
A banana is not a tree, it is a herbaceous plant. This means that it has the characteristic of a herb and above all as a flowering plant, it does not produce woody tissue and dies back at the end of each growing season
roots take waqter from the ground and send it to up the stem and into the leaves. The leaves then release the water back to earth and so the cycle continues.
A banana is not a tree, it is a large herbaceous plant. It is not evergreen, suckers spring up from the main plant and are cut back after the fruit has matured and been harvested
Yes, the ginger should be able to grow back from the roots. You should cut back the damaged leaves, to keep the plant healthy. Also, if it is expected to get cold, you may want to cover them.