It's either tubers or rhizomes. Tubers have starch filled roots, like potatoes, which I guess you can call tube shaped. Or you mean rhizomes, tubular roots that result in another, cloned, plant. Like the raspberry bush in my garden that has sent out roots to grow another plant right in the middle of our lawn...
The water moves into transport tissue/tubes in the roots called xylem if the plant is vascular. Nonvascular plants have no xylem. Water moves from cell to cell in nonvascular plants. In both cases, the type of movement is called osmosis.
Xylem are small tubes in vascular plants that carry water up from the roots to its leaves etc
The tissue responsible for moving water up from the plant roots is called xylem. Xylem consists of specialized cells called tracheids and vessel elements that form a network of interconnected tubes. These tubes allow water to be transported upwards through the plant, from the roots to the leaves.
Tiny tube-like veins called phloem transport material inside a plant. For example, water from the roots travels up these tubes to reach the leaves, and the energy from photosynthesis travels down the tubes to reach the roots.
Air plants.
They have tubes in them called the xylem and phloem tubes. The xylem tubes carry water and mineral salts from the roots to all parts of the plant. The phloem which carry food from the leaves to all aprts of the plant.
The water moves into transport tissue/tubes in the roots called xylem if the plant is vascular. Nonvascular plants have no xylem. Water moves from cell to cell in nonvascular plants. In both cases, the type of movement is called osmosis.
Xylem are small tubes in vascular plants that carry water up from the roots to its leaves etc
plants that do not have tubes
tracheophytes are plants with roots,stem leaves and they have conducting tubes,while atracheophytes are plants that don't have roots,stem,leaves and conducting tubes.
The tissue responsible for moving water up from the plant roots is called xylem. Xylem consists of specialized cells called tracheids and vessel elements that form a network of interconnected tubes. These tubes allow water to be transported upwards through the plant, from the roots to the leaves.
Tiny tube-like veins called phloem transport material inside a plant. For example, water from the roots travels up these tubes to reach the leaves, and the energy from photosynthesis travels down the tubes to reach the roots.
Air plants.
Do all the plants have tubes that move water and nutrients to all of their organs?
Plants that have tubes are called vascular plants.
Mosses do not have tubes for moving nutrients and water. They also do not have any true leaves, stems, or roots. Nonvascular plants also do not have transport tubes.
cambium