Dead Man's fingers: a vascular plant that has given up on photosynthesis and is now live by decomposition alone like a fungus.
Red algae: Actually has green chlorophyll but red pigment is so abundant the colour is dominant.
Maple tree in winter.
Coral root, spruce, horsetail, purple-leaf sand cherry and mushrooms. coral root, spruce, horsetail, purple-leaf sand cherry, ephedra and mushrooms.
Cell parts called chloroplasts are present in the plant cell. Chloroplast contains a pigment known as chlorophyllwhich imparts green colour to the leaves.
The name of the flower is stock. It smells wonderful, doesn't it?
The milk thistle plant has a long stem, green leaves with white spots, and pink to purple spiky flowered head (which true to its name, resembles a thistle).
the african violet
chloroplast
How many plants in india have no green leaves
If you mean the green pigment in leaves of plants, it's called the chlorophyll. But if you're really referring to the green leaves of plant, then sorry, I don't know. The answer would still be green leaves, if you're looking for the name of the green leaves of plants.
lettuce
A plant has green leaves. The substance that makes them green is called chlorophyll. The plant uses the chlorophyll to photosynthesise which is the name for the process of it making its own food.
give me three things that green leaves use to make food
Cell parts called chloroplasts are present in the plant cell. Chloroplast contains a pigment known as chlorophyllwhich imparts green colour to the leaves.
The green pigment present in the leaf cell of a plant is called 'chlorophyll'.
Evergreen plants have foliage which remains green throughout the year. Old leaves die and are shed, new leaves grow, but the plant remains continually green, hence the name, evergreen.
The name of the flower is stock. It smells wonderful, doesn't it?
What is the botanical name of money plant leave
sorry, not enough information for a proper identifcation - try and be more specific with the description
Welwitschia mirabilisDiscovered in 1859. The Afrikaans call it the "two-leaves-cannot-die"