no no
Maybe
Bladder wrack (Fucus vesiculosus L.) answers to the common names of "Varech v
Bladder wrack grows more quickly than saw wrack due to differences in reproductive strategies and habitat preferences. Bladder wrack produces more spores that disperse easily, allowing it to colonize a larger area more efficiently. Saw wrack, on the other hand, has fewer reproductive structures and prefers to grow in more stable environments, slowing its growth rate.
noo its not a plant
Bladder wrackis a plant that is found in the sea, and it has the same self feeding system as land plants, which makes it similar, using Chlorophyll, which is what plants use to feed themselves. Another similarity is that Bladder wrack also usesphotosynthesis like plants on land to help it grow and develop. Bladder wrack can also be used as medicinelike land plants. You can buy it in health shops, and it is a supplement forunder activethyroid.
Bladder wrack (Fucus vesiculosus L.) answers to the common names of "Varech v
No, bladderwrack is not a fern. It is a type of brown seaweed that is commonly found along coastlines in cold waters. Ferns are non-flowering plants that have roots, stems, and leaves.
oxygen and carbon minoxide and bubble gas co2
Bladderwrack in Tamil is known as "நீர் கொக்கு" (Neer Kokku).
The chloroplast contains chlorophyll.
The Leaf of a plant contains Chlorophyll.
Bladder wrack does not move to a certain position in the day till night, it is an algae not a plant and can not move position like an animal. Although at night the tide comes in because of the moon causing the bladder wrack to float because of its bladders (small air sacs found in pairs over its body) and when the tide goes down in the morning again it is in a different position to the previous day because of the retreat of the tide not because it moved consciencely. It is most commonly found middle to lower shore at low tide.