Phloem
Phloem and xylem tissue carries material from a plant's roots to its leaves.
Xylem tissue carries material from a plant's roots to it's leaves
The phloem carries the food down from the leaves. Not to be confused with xylem, which carries water up to the leaves.
The phloem tissue is responsible for transporting glucose and other nutrients from the leaves to the rest of the plant, including the stem and roots. This transport system allows for the distribution of sugars produced during photosynthesis to different parts of the plant for energy and growth.
a special tissue called xylem
Xylem tissue
Xylem tissue carries a watery mixture from the roots to the leaves. :I
The vascular tissue xylem carries water from the roots of the plant to the leaves of the plant via the stem of the plant.
The xylem tissue in a plant carries sap from the roots to the leaves through a process called transpiration. Water and nutrients are absorbed by the roots and then pulled up through the xylem vessels by evaporation of water from the leaves.
The phloem is the vascular tissue responsible for transporting sugars, including glucose, from the leaves to the roots in a plant. This transportation process is known as translocation and it is driven by osmotic pressure gradients between source and sink tissues.
This would be the vascular plants vascular tissue. The xylem carries water from the roots to the leaves and the pholem carries manufactured sugars from the leaves to the places in the plant where the sugars are needed.
This would be the vascular plants vascular tissue. The xylem carries water from the roots to the leaves and the pholem carries manufactured sugars from the leaves to the places in the plant where the sugars are needed.