Through the phloem
THEY GET IT BY getting. Sunlight
by the sun's sunlight called calorific
yes
Osmosis
yes. chloraplasts is necessary for all plants to receive energy from sun.
Yes...........Phloem is the tissue that transports sugar from leaves to all parts of the plant by the process called Translocation.
the mint plant is vascular becuase of its tube like tissues that suck up water and other stuff from the ground
It is an angiosperm because they produce food and can be brightly colored but not all the time.
Yes a Tulip is a vascular plant, becausea vascular plant is a plant belonging to subkingdom Tracheophyta, divisions Pteridophyta (ferns, horsetails, and club mosses) and Spermatophyta. That is a TulipEdited answer:Because it contains vascular bundles.
by the sun's sunlight called calorific
by the sun's sunlight called calorific
By the vascular tissue xylem, which carries water from the roots to the leaves.
through endoosmosis
Vascular plants are plants that have transport tissues for carrying water, nutrients, and sugar to plant cells. Because they have transport tissues, many vascular plants can become very large. An example of a vascular plant is a full grown tree. The transport tissues form a system of tubes tat extends from the roots to all parts of the plant. These tubes are made up of two kinds of tissue: xylem and phloem. Xylem tissue carries water and nutrients from the roots to the leaves. Phloem tissue carries sugar from the leaves to other cells of the plants. Non vascular plants are plants that lack tissues that transport water, nutrients, and sugar. Some example of non vascular plants are mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. Non vascular plants don't have tissues to carry the materials that cells need to stay healthy. Because of this, they don't grow very large. These plants don't have true roots to absorb water. Instead, each cell absorbs the water and nutrients it needs directly from the soil or air. Because they tend to live very close together, the cells of these plants may also get materials they need from neighboring plant cells.
cork cambium, apical meristem, and vascular cambium. all the above
yes. chloraplasts is necessary for all plants to receive energy from sun.
Yes...........Phloem is the tissue that transports sugar from leaves to all parts of the plant by the process called Translocation.
It helps the plant move water to the leaves.
Shamrocks are vascular plants. All plants are vascular besides algae, and some types of mosses. Any plant that has tissue that conducts water and nutrients from one part of a plant to another is a vascular plant.
Yes. The two types of vascular tissue are xylem and phloem. Xylem brings water and minerals up from the roots to throughout the plant. Phloem conducts the sugar products of photosynthesis to where they are needed in the plant.
the mint plant is vascular becuase of its tube like tissues that suck up water and other stuff from the ground