yes
Xylem and Phloem
When the leaves finish with photosynthesis (the process of making food for the plant), they use phloem tubes, which are tubes carrying sugar and other minerals down from the leaves to the roots, the roots will save up the sugar (plant food) under the ground. Some plants store the bulbs in bulbs (e.g. onions), some will turn it into starch (e.g. potatoes), etc...
The sieve tubes of the phloem cells help to transport sugars. The stem of the plant has a layer of cells called phloem. Part of the phloem is made of sieve tubes that permit the flow of sugars solution through the influence of fluid pressure differential. The phloem also contains companion cells for the sieve tubes which aid in the transport of sugars to these tubes.
Xylem moves materials and water up. Phloem carries sugar down into the roots.
Galvanized tubes are steel tubes that are coated with zinc to protect them from rusting.
TESCO
Xylem and Phloem
Tubes in the steam.
The vascular tissue called the phloem.
pixie sticks??
Drills, metal tubes and buckets.
to prevent autooxidation of cuprous oxide by atmospheric oxygen
seminal vesicles
No, they have veins, aka vascular bundles (xylem and phloem/tubes that transport water and sugar around the plant).
For energy so it can get to the fallopian tubes to be fertilized - ie. to move and stay alive.
at sorce, food is moved by active transport in the sieve tubes of phloem.due to the presence of sugar in sieve tubes,their solutes concentration increse and water enter them from xylemthis resuts in higher pressur of water in these tubes, which drives the solution of food toward sink/.
Cartilage rings are gradually replaced by regular plates of cartilage!