Elodea is a freshwater aquatic plant.
nothin elodea dont have no plants
Technically, if you placed the elodea in a bowl full of oil, it can't. however, in an oil spill, it is one of the only plants to survive, if barely. since the roots absorb the oil, instead of water, then in a sense, the oil is reduced.
No, elodea is a genus of aquatic plants often called the waterweeds.
No, elodea is a genus of aquatic plants often called the waterweeds.
Steel does not absorb oils, unless shaped into an interesting shape like a steel drum.
Well elodea lives on top of water, and cattails live in swampy areas. :)
Elodea is a Eukaryote. Prokaryotic consists of bacteria whereas Eukaryotes are plants and animals. Eukaryotes have a nucleas, Prokaryotes do not.
Elodea cells are plant cells which are mainly found in aquatic plants which are commonly known as water weeds. They have a cell membrane, mitochondria, nucleus, ribosome and so much more.
Just did this lab in Biology. Onion cells do not have chloroplasts; therefore, they do not possess the green pigment, chlorophyll, that chloroplasts produce. Elodea plants do carry out photosynthesis.
Try pet stores (PETCO, Petsmart, etc). They have living aquatic plants.
Plants absorb carbon dioxide during photosynthesis.