The cells of the plant would continue to grow, and that would be a problem because there would be more demand on the placement of DNA and be harder for organelles to move across. Therefore, the plant would not survive.
it will go threw
Yes because plant cells go through Mitosis and Meiosis just like animal cells
Mitosis happens in the body cell'sIt happens in somatic cells. Only sex cell producing cells undergo meiosis
Water does not go threw the groung because the particles are solid. What happens is the water passes threw open air pockets threw out the ground. It enters an aquifer.
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No the reason for that is that you can never have two process going on at once they would interupt the other process there for canceling them both out and killing the cell.
Mitosis is broken up into 4 phases, Prophase, Metophase, Anaphase, and Telophase. During these phases the DNA, which was replicated during Interphase, split and 2 new cells are formed.
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They react with each other and go threw chemical change.
Nearly all eukaryotic cells go through mitosis to divide. Being more specific: in humans, somatic (body) cells go through mitosis.
No, plant cells do not undergo meiosis. Meiosis occurs in reproductive cells, such as pollen or ovule cells in plants, where it is responsible for producing genetically diverse haploid cells for sexual reproduction. Regular plant cells, such as those in roots or leaves, do not undergo meiosis.
Somatic cells, also known as body cells, go through mitosis.