The plasma, or liquid part of the blood, is primary responsible for transporting nutrients, hormones, and wastes. Oxygen, in contrast, is carried by the red blood cells.
The plasma, or liquid part of the blood, is primary responsible for transporting nutrients, hormones, and wastes. Oxygen, in contrast, is carried by the red blood cells.
The red blood cells
Plasma
Plasma.
The plasma component of the blood, contained within the cardiovascular system, transports hormones and nutrients.
The blood carries nutrients from the small intestine to all over the body. The villi in the small intestine allow nutrients to pass through the intestinal wall to the blood vessels. Then the blood carries the nutrients away.
No, lymph doesn't do that. Blood (specifically red blood cells), a part of the cardiovascular system, carries nutrients and oxygen to the cells.
circulatory
Blood it's simple :)
Well that's a pretty Vague question...But when you eat your stomach breaks down the food into nutrients, your blood then absorbs the nutrients and carries them to your heart where it pumps the nutrients everywhere through yet more blood.
Blood carries red blood cells which carries blood around your body
A blood vessel that carries blood back to the heart.
A blood vessel is a tube shaped organ that carries blood. It carries the blood through the tissues and organs of the human body.
The vein of a plant and human are alike because each one carries either blood or nutrients to the main part of either the human or plants body.
Basically, blood transports oxygen, nutrients and hormones throughout the body, allowing them to pass into cells to be used for cell processes. It also carries waste products such as carbon dioxide away from cells. Blood gets transported through major body systems, for example, the lungs to be oxygenated and the heart to get pumped throughout the body. The kidneys filter blood to remove nitrogenous waste, which is excreted in urine.
Blood is a fluid connective tissue whose functions are:The transport of oxygen, nutrients, hormones, enzymes, waste productsThe transport of waste productsFighting off infections (contains white blood cells)ClottingThe regulation of body temperature