yes.
sun nutrients(soil) and water if you want to get technical it also needs carbon dioxide
It needs food, water, soil, nutrients, and light.
A plant needs water, nutrients in soil, sunlight, fertilizer... etc. but not all plants need all of that. Trees need carben deoxide like we need water! Poop...
Absorb nutrients and support/anchor the plant (in most plants, but not all).
no that is not all it needs sun light
It gives it nutrients and minerals, and the ground holds water for the plant. 2nd answer: . . . but not all plants are rooted in soil. Some orchids are parasites that live on other plants, like trees, and get their nutrients from the other plant.
Yes, the type of potting soil used can affect how fast a plant grows. High-quality soil rich in nutrients and organic matter will typically support faster and healthier plant growth compared to poor quality soil with inadequate nutrients and drainage. It is important to choose the right type of potting soil based on the specific needs of the plant being grown.
Soil with a lot of nutrients - generally and theoretically -- is better for a plant than soil with fertilizer.Specifically, the best possible world is the availability and accessibility of the nutrients which populate soil naturally through the processes of decomposition and erosion. But not all of the necessary nutrients may be there, and those that are in the soil may not be in soluble form or in sufficient quantity. The optimal situation will be the presence in the soil of all of the necessary nutrients and in the macro and micro amounts in which they need to be present and soluble.Fertilizer constitutes a corrective or supplemental measure. It may be necessary because of what needs to grow or not to grow in the soil. But it also might be a counterproductive or superfluous measure if it is not accompanied by regular soil analyses.
if you plant the same plant every year, the plant will only take the nutrient it needs and will suck up all that and leave may other nutrients. with crop rotation the amount of the nutrients stays in balance.
Flowers adapt in a garden because the soil in which the plant is growing in has a lot of nutrients and if another plant or organism dies, all the nutrients go into the soil and that is what plants feed on.
Crop rotation. If you plant the same crop year-after-year. That crop will use up all the nutrients specific to the needs of the plant. Crop rotation involves planting a different crop each year - thus the nutrients in the soil are more evenly used.
Roots provide a source of nutrients and water for the plants by drawing them in from the surrounding area.They suck in nutrients water and food. The plant needs this to grow and reproduceRoots take in water and minerals from the soil.It sucks up all the water in the soil and brings it to the stem.The root on the plant gives the plant water and nutrients.