blood follows the moving of sugar
When a plant moves sugars from its leaves to its stems, the stems are considered the sink. A sink is any part of the plant that stores or uses the sugars produced during photosynthesis. In this case, the stems act as a storage or utilization site for the sugars transported from the leaves.
roots
Ribose
phloem in vascular tissue.
phloem in vascular tissue.
Sugar moves from the parts where it is produced (sources) to the places where it is needed (sink).
Sugars can be classified based on their ability to undergo mutarotation, which is the process of interconverting between different forms of a sugar molecule. Sugars that can undergo mutarotation are called reducing sugars, while those that cannot are non-reducing sugars.
The tissue in plants that moves sugars downward from the leaves is called phloem. Phloem is part of the vascular system and is responsible for the transport of organic nutrients, particularly sucrose, produced during photosynthesis. This movement occurs through a process known as translocation, where sugars are actively transported to various parts of the plant, including roots and growing tissues.
The following dance moves involve circular motion:headspinhelicopterspinning side-freezespinning turtlewindmill
Flies.
The vascular system of a plant, consisting of xylem and phloem, moves water, nutrients, and sugars to all plant parts. Water and minerals are transported from the roots to the rest of the plant through the xylem, while sugars produced during photosynthesis in the leaves are transported to all parts of the plant through the phloem.
It moves sideways. :)