A parasite lives on or in a host, which it depends on for survival. This relationship can be simply parasitic, where the host does not benefit from the parasite. This relationship may also be symbiotic, in which both the parasite and the host benefit.
Most of them grow on other plants and some on animals too.
Plant parasites are insects that live on plants and such their juice.
aphids, nematodes
Host of parasitic plants
By saprophytic or parasitic mode of nutrition
It is a parasitic symbiotic relationship. Mildews use 'haustoria' (specialised hyphal structures) which grow into the cells of plants and siphon off nutrients and sugars to the fungal thallus.
African Violets . . . . . . .Streptocarpus . . . . . Begonia . . . . . . Kataka-taka
The roots of most plants grow towards the pull of gravity.
Epiphytic and parasitic plants grow on plants. It helps support the host plant.
Epiphytic plants grow on other plants for support and parasitic plants grow on host plants for support and food both.
reciprocity's grow on trees because they are not autotrophs. They have to depend on other.
Only parasitic plants such as Dodder can grow without photosynthesis
Host of parasitic plants
Plants such as ferns, mosses, epiphytes (orchids, bromeliads etc.), vines and climbers as well as a range of parasitic plants
They grow on another plant so that they can obtain the nutrition from that plant. They are known as parasitic plants.
Parasitic plants do not need. Cuscuta is an example
the plants that obtain there food by totally depending on host eg-cuscuta
the non-green plants which live on other living organisms and obtain food from them are called parasitic plants
scale leaves of parasitic plants
Ferns are not parasitic, however some are "epithitic". Epiphytes are plants that grow upon another plant (such as a tree) non-parasitically. They derive moisture and nutrients from the air and rain, not from the host on which they are anchored.