Milkweed is a vascular plant.
Milkweed is a vascular plant.
Milkweed is a vascular plant. Vascular plants have specialized tissues for transporting water, nutrients, and sugars throughout the plant, which milkweed possesses. This classification includes a variety of plants that have a well-developed system of xylem and phloem.
Yes, milkweed plants are vascular. The plants in question (Asclepias spp) meet the two requirements for vascular plant membership. They succeed in dispersing minerals and water throughout the plant and in providing plant-wide access to photosynthetic products.
Milkweed is a vascular plant. Vascular plants possess specialized tissues for transporting water, nutrients, and food throughout the plant, and milkweed has these systems in place. This group includes other flowering plants, ferns, and trees, all of which have a complex structure that supports their growth and reproduction.
Nonvascular because it's just weed nothing
There is common milkweed, purple milkweed, tropical milkweed, and swamp milkweed.
no it has seeds so it is actually a seed plant Edited answer: Hornwort is seedless non-vascular plant
Yes. There is milkweed in Jamaica. The Jamaican Monarch lives on milkweed.
Milkweed is not a decomposer.
Eggs on milkweed are eggs of monarch butterflies or milkweed beetles.
Milkweed products can refer to items made from the fibers or seeds of the milkweed plant. Common milkweed products include milkweed floss used as insulation, milkweed oil, and milkweed seed pods used in crafts. Milkweed is also a crucial source of food for monarch butterflies.
There are different types of milkweed. Tropical milkweed grows in the south. Common milkweed grows in on the eastern side of the Mississippi River. There is western milkweed on the Pacific coast.