A responsive movement of a plant that is not dependent on the direction of the stimulus is called a non-directional or non-tropic movement. Examples of non-directional movements in plants include thigmonasty (response to touch), nastic movements (response to changes in environmental conditions), and nyctinasty (response to changes in light).
a nastic response. if it helps its the only coice that has response on it.
Nastic response occur in a part of a plant that grows towards a non-directional stimulus while Tropic response occur in a part of a plant that grows towards or away from a directional stimulus.
plants need waterpoint made. period.. . . . . . .
autonomic movment due to interal causes and paratonic movment due external caues
Tropisms and nastic movements are both plant responses to external stimuli. however tropisms are depend on the direction of the stimulus nastic movements do not depend on the direction of a stimulus
Nastic movements are those movements of plants when they respond to stimuli.They either bend towards or away the stimulus.It occurs slowly.Curvature movements are different
nastic movement in botany, the movement of plant parts in response either to certain external stimuli or to internal growth stimuli. Nastic movements, which are generally slow, can be observed by time-lapse photography. Such movements as those of developing buds, which swell, open up, and eventually fall off, are examples of internally directed, or autonomic, nastic movements
The nastic movements of plants keep the shoot in contact with light and roots in the dark to adapt the plants from adverse conditions of root and shoot growth.
Tropic responses are called tropism. It is the growth or turning movement of plants in response to an environmental stimulus. Nastic movements are non-directional responses to stimuli, independent of the stimulus's position.
A responsive movement of a plant that is not dependent on the direction of the stimulus is called a non-directional or non-tropic movement. Examples of non-directional movements in plants include thigmonasty (response to touch), nastic movements (response to changes in environmental conditions), and nyctinasty (response to changes in light).
No
convenction!!
True(;
volcanos and earthquakes
unheating soler movements
Muscular contractions.