no.
Yes -definitely. The main pigment in plant, called cholorophyll, abosorbs yellow and blue wavelengths, while reflecting the green. That is the reason we see leaves as green.
light energy is not strong enough! <--NovaNet
Not enough light penetrates to allow photosynthesis.
No. Green plants were on the planet, long before there were people. Green plants need carbon dioxide, water, sunlight, soil, and seeds to live. They do not need people.
mammals cant survived without green plants because that is their food and that how they live without green plants they will die.
That they are green things that live.
Shrubs and herbs live under trees
green ones.
no
No. they live in a green, wet environment. They like to climb trees and plants. If you get one, make sure you have a sprayer full of water and plants. Nontoxic plants or plastic ones work.
True. Even animals that eat other animals rely on green plants- since the prey animals eat green plants. And animals all need oxygen- which is given off by green plants.
That's vey simple, they absorb every other colour. It has to do with the energetic value of the light at different waves, so for green plants, green light gives them least. The reason green plants reflect green light is also simple. Photosynthetic substances like chlorophyll require different amounts of energy, and reflect/absorb different wavelengths of light. At certain temperatures, plants can only maintain carotenoids, which often reflect more reds and yellows (this is why tree leaves change color in the fall), and at more ideal temperatures, plants are able to absorb enough energy to produce chlorophyll. A plant's color is completely dependent on its photoabsorbtive pigments. This is also why plants that are locked in a closet will turn white, but still live for a while: they devote their energy to tasks besides producing photoabsorbants, since there are few photons to absorb.