stem, leaves..
In the stem and leaves of plants most of the vascular tissue is found. This vascular tissue is in the form of xylem and phloem.
Vascular tissue
The plant is non vascular. Non vascular means a plant has no v-tissue (vascular tissue) and has no roots or stems. Like moss.
A plant that is not vascular does not have xylem or phloem to carry nutrients throughout the plant. The non vascular plants have a simpler transport system established for water and nutrients required.
Plants such as carrots or celery stalks are composed of vascular tissue.
The tissues found in plant veins include xylem, which transports water and minerals from the roots to the rest of the plant, and phloem, which transports sugars produced during photosynthesis to other parts of the plant. These tissues are organized in vascular bundles within the veins of the plant.
Vascular tissue in plants primarily functions in transportation of water, minerals, and nutrients throughout the plant. It consists of xylem, which transports water and minerals from roots to leaves, and phloem, which transports sugars produced in the leaves to other parts of the plant. Vascular tissue also provides structural support for the plant.
The three types of tissue in plants are dermal tissue, ground tissue, and vascular tissue. Dermal tissue covers the outer surface, ground tissue forms the bulk of the plant body, and vascular tissue transports water and nutrients.
The vascular tissue called the phloem.
"ground" or "ground tissue"
The vascular tissue system is one of three tissue systems that make up a plant, the other two tissue systems or ground and dermal, with dermal tissue being the outer layer and the ground tissue making up most of the inside of a plant. Vascular tissue is surrounded by ground tissue, but vascular tissue doesn't make up much of the inside of a plant, this is because vascular tissue transports water, mineral nutrient , and organic compounds, to all parts of a plant. Plants don't depend entirely on the vascular tissue system for transportation, the plants themselves can transport any necessary fluids and/or nutrients throughout their systems. A plant's vascular system is composed of two networks of hollow tubes, similar to our veins and arteries. Each network consists of a different type of vascular tissue that works to move different resources throughout the plant. These vascular tissues would be the tissues known as xylem and phloem.
Plant