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they carry the water and its sugars through the plant.
They both carry, or transport blood or nutrients to where the body or plant needs.
Veins in a leaf carry water, nutrients, and sugars throughout the plant. Water and minerals are absorbed by the roots from the soil and transported through the veins to the rest of the plant for photosynthesis and growth. Sugars produced during photosynthesis are also transported through the veins to provide energy for various plant functions.
xylem and phloem are both in plants, xylem are like he veins in a plant, they carry water to the top of the plant
The placement of the veins in a leaf can limit the effects of photosynthesis and transport water through the leaf and plant body. The location of the veins and the shape of the leaf are two of the factors used to determine the species of the plant.
The two groups are vascular and non-vascular: vascular plants have veins that carry water up the plant (ex. trees, flowers, ect.), and non-vascular plants do not have veins to carry water up the plant (ex. mosses, liverworts, ect.).
Veins are vessels which carry blood towards the heart. In addition to blood itself veins carry liquid plasma and it constituent factors.
Veins carry stale, or deoxygenated blood from the body back to the heart. The exception to this rule is the pulmonary veins, which carry oxygenated blood from the lungs to the heart.
The veins carry blood to the heart from the lungs and the body.
Cardiac veins carry blood from ? to ?
Veins carry oxygen depleted blood to the heart.
Yes, veins carry alot of carbon dioxide.