The planet Venus has a highly toxic atmosphere and cannot support life, so it has no plants.
no they can't because there is no soil, water or sunlight (the clouds block it). and the air is too hot and dense
The venus flytrap, the plant, is a living thing.Venus, the planet, is not.
Inner planets like Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars have craters, especially Mars and Mercury, due to impacts from asteroids and meteorites. While Earth is the only inner planet known to support life, the search for signs of life on Mars and the potential for life on Venus (in the past or present) continues.
The atmosphere of Venus is not breathable by any life form that we know of. Our probes survive less than a minute on the surface.
Venus has no moons.
No. Venus is too hot to support any sort of life. Earth is the only planet known to have life on it.
Life forms from Venus would be called Venusians. Life forms from Mars would be called Martians. In any respect, however, there is no evidence, nor scientific support of life on either Venus or Mars.
The planet Venus has a highly toxic atmosphere and cannot support life, so it has no plants.
no they can't because there is no soil, water or sunlight (the clouds block it). and the air is too hot and dense
There is no known evidence of life on Venus. The planet is very hot and does not have the conditions necessary for life to thrive.
Probably not. Venus has toxic gases that disable any possible life, but there might be some life on Venus that has adapted to the harsh gases and mild temperatures.Cacti and other organisms have adapted to the desert, so why can't there be a possible chance on Venus? We really have no knowledge of life on Venus exept for the basics. If there is life on Venus, we would probably never be aware.
There is a possibility that there was life on Venus about a billion years ago, but no evidence is available to support the fact - and is unlikely to be gained in the near future. Venus is just too hostile to our current probes, let alone human exploration. Also, because the surface of Venus has been reformed by massive lava flows, any evidence would have probably been eradicated in the process. The jury is out, but it seems more than likely that Venus did have life, not necessarily on land, but more than likely in the oceans. What that life was, is any ones guess.
The venus flytrap, the plant, is a living thing.Venus, the planet, is not.
No signs of life of any sort have been found on Venus, or any other place outside of the Earth.
Venus is simply too hot to support any sort of life, with surface temperatures exceeding 800 degrees Fahrenheit. Mercury barely has an atmosphere to support life and shield it from harmful radiation and regulate temperature. Mercury is much like the moon, only it gets much hotter during the day.Addendum:Actually, we don't know if there is or isn't some form of life on Venus. While life on Mercury is highly unlikely, there are environments on Earth that closely mirror the surface of Venus where life thrives here. Consider what has been learned about the immediate vicinty of thermal vents along the mid-Atlantic ridge in the past ten years.
No. Never been visited by humans.