through cell walls and/or membranes of their cells, usually using aquaporin proteins.
well developed transport tubes for plants to obtain water and food.
Ferns and mosses are examples of plants that do not have tubes for transporting water and nutrients like vascular plants do. Instead, they rely on other methods, such as diffusion and absorption, to transport these essential resources.
The other tube that transports water and minerals is the xylem.
The complex transport tubes that move water, nutrients, and sugar throughout plants belong to the tissue level of organization. These tubes, known as xylem and phloem, make up the vascular tissue system in plants.
Mosses do not have tubes for moving nutrients and water. They also do not have any true leaves, stems, or roots. Nonvascular plants also do not have transport tubes.
Xylems are not plants - they are tubes within a plant which transport water from the plant roots to the leaves.
Plants that do not have a system of tubes for transporting water and nutrients are called non-vascular plants. These plants rely on osmosis and diffusion for internal transport of materials. Some examples include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts.
The xylem tubes in plants carry water from the roots to the leaves, while the phloem tubes transport food (sugars) produced in the leaves to other parts of the plant for storage or growth.
the xylem tubes transport water up and down the stems of plants
The process is capillary action. The part is the xylem
radish is a vegetable. Vascular plant have pipes to transport water and food. Non Vascular plants dont
Plants with tubes that can move fluid within themselves are known as vascular plants. These tubes, called xylem and phloem, transport water, nutrients, and sugars throughout the plant to support growth and metabolism. Vascular plants include ferns, flowering plants, conifers, and many others.