Shoot is the second part of a plant to grow.
i think its the stem or the root
Peas grow inside pods or hulls that grow on a vine.
Embryo
Okay, well there is tropism and stimulus. The stimulus can be gravity, light, and touch. So it depends... If there is a window above the plant and it is reaching upwards towards it... then it would be light, and the plant's response would be reaching upward towards it.
A plant does not grow upwards. A tropism is the growth of a plant in response to a stimulus. This means a plant does not grow upwards, it grows towards a stimulus which in most cases is light. Try it out, put a plant in a dark closet with a light on one side and watch the plant grow towards the light. The results should be clear after a number of days. The plant's response to light is known as phototropism. Hope I helped :)
Shoot is the second part of a plant to grow.
put it on a plant's climbing-net
The part of pineapple that you plant to grow pineapples is the the Pineapple Crown.
Not always. Juniper Tams also grow outward, and the Ivy plant grows along the ground.
The stem.
No, plants do not always grow downward. Plant roots always grow downward due to positive gravitropism or positive geotropism. Plant shoots always grow upwards due to negative gravitropism or negative geotropism.
You can try but the plant will try to grow upwards. All plants grow up and their roots grow down. This is coded in their DNA.
They grow upwards and become drawn and do not reach their natural spread.
Most plants grow up, or away from gravity. Even vining plants will first grow upwards before they grow too long and start to vine. So, if a plant were subjected to a change in gravity...say, hung from an upside down pot...it would change it's growth direction to again grow away from gravity, growing upwards.
The roots.
fruit/ seed