Water.
Same place where normal plants undergo photosynthesis: the leaves. Carnivorous plants live in an environment with a poor soil, and needs an additional sustenance such as potassium or nitrogen that are not adequately present in the soil.
Nope. Plants can be grown without soil. It is done in hydroponics, and orchids do not grow in soil.
First by soil-absorption, then by evaporation and photosynthesis.
Plants get the water they require for photosynthesis by absorbing from the soil through their root systems. It is then transported up the stem and to the leaves where is is used to synthesise sugars through photosynthesis.
CO2 is taken from air.Water is taken from soil.
Plants are autotrophs, meaning they make their own food - plants use the energy from sunlight to create sugar, which they then use for metabolic energy. Other nutrients are drawn from either the soil or the air around the plants.
Plants get nutrients from the soil they are in. The nutrients dissolve in the water and are then absorbed from the plant's roots. Plants make food with photosynthesis.
Plants produce their own food through photosynthesis but absorb water and minerals from the soil.
Plants get the nutrients that they need from the soil and water. They get the ingredients to make their own food through photosynthesis.
what makes plants grow is the sun light and and the rich soil and the rain, also what keeps them growing is photosynthesis.
They absorb minerals and water ect from the soil through their roots
Water is absorbed from soil . CO2 is from atmosphere.