A vacuole is the organelle in a cell that stores water ,dissolved minerals, and other nutrients. A vacuole also can store waste products.
water
Clay and organic soils hold nutrients better then sandy soils because the sandy soils as the water drains away, the water will carry the nutrients with it. This is called leaching and the nutrients will not be available for the plants to use.
Yes. Dissolving nutrients in water makes the nutrients much more available to biological organisms and can also help move those nutrients between areas.
Plants absorb water and nutrients from the soil though their roots.
yes they store water in their stomachs and food and nutrients in one of their humps
They store water and nutrients
They store water and nutrients
they store water nutrients and oxygen
No, they do not. The popular belief that camels store water in their humps is a myth and zoological hoax. Camels actually store fat in their humps. Excessive nutrients that the camel does not currently need are converted into fat and stored in the humps. These nutrients come from plants, seeds and water. 1,000g of fat in the camels hump can yield the equivalent to 1,111g of water when metabolised. In summary, camels do not physically store water in their humps. They store fatty tissue containing nutrients which is metabolised when the camel needs those nutrients.
the vacuole's absorb and store water and nutrients for the plant cell! it also helps protect the cell but to store nutrients is its main priority.
So they can absorb nutrients and water and store them.
Cells and carbohydrates are the two nutrients which store energy.
nutrients and water
water, and nutrients
Storing food is not a function of nutrients because nutrients are derived from food.
the vacuole.