yes vascular plants can grow to be quite large because they have roots or stems
no
Redwoods are vascular plants. Vascular plants have tissues that transport water and nutrients throughout the plant, allowing them to grow tall and large. Redwoods have specialized vascular tissues called xylem and phloem that enable them to transport water, minerals, and sugars.
It's because pterophytes are vascular plants that contains vascular tissues which support growth. Bryophytes are nonvascular plants, they don't have vascular tissues that's why it doesn't grow too large. ! Vanessa =D
is it possible for the non vascular plants to grow tall? why?
yes
True because the tissues allow better growth.
yes they can
Vascular plants have xylem and phloem, thus allowing the plant to live on land and not only in watery-marshy areas. Vascular plants are also able to grow bigger and taller.
a vascular plant wouldn't grow on a rock because it has roots and stems
Vascular plants have specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients, while non-vascular plants do not. Vascular plants have roots, stems, and leaves, while non-vascular plants lack these structures. Vascular plants can grow taller and have better support compared to non-vascular plants.
The vascular system in plants like pines give the plants stength, stability, and ability to transport nutrients around the plant. Non-vascular plants can not grow as tall as vascular plants becasue without the vascular system the plant is not able to transport nutrients great distances easily, and do not have the structural support to grow up.
i think vascular plants are unable to perform cell to cell transpot