Glucose
No, celery has leaves but the celery is not a leaf. if the leaves are up and the root is down whats leftover
The word root for "leaf" is "foli-".
Stomata are responsible for allowing air to enter the leaf cells through tiny openings on the leaf surface. Nutrients are absorbed by the root hairs from the soil and transported through the xylem and phloem tissues to reach the leaf cells.
water
the particular leaf falls under the minority reservation quota!
root
The leaf is dependent on the root for absorbing water and nutrients from the soil. The stem connects the leaf to the root, allowing for the transport of these essential resources to the leaf for photosynthesis and other metabolic processes. Together, the leaf, root, and stem form a cohesive system that supports the overall health and function of the plant.
Some common sites that receive transported phloem saps include growing buds, developing fruits, and root tips. These regions have high metabolic activity and growth potential, making them prime locations for receiving the nutrients and sugars transported through the phloem from photosynthetic tissues.
In the analogy "leaf: spinach:: ? : root," the relationship is that a leaf is a part of a spinach plant. Therefore, the end of the analogy would be "vegetable," as it represents a broader category that includes roots, similar to how a leaf is a part of spinach. So the complete analogy is "leaf: spinach:: vegetable: root."
The vasculature inside the green leaf moves a number of particles of food, water, minerals and gases.
leaf
tree