A plant that has tube-like cells to help transport water is the xylem. Xylem is a type of tissue found in vascular plants. It is responsible for the upward movement of water and minerals from the roots to the shoots and leaves of plants. Xylem is composed of several types of cells including tracheids vessel elements xylem parenchyma cells and xylem fibers. Tracheids are the most common type of xylem cells and they are tube-like in shape. They are connected end-to-end to form a continuous tube that allows water to travel from the roots to the leaves. Vessel elements are also tube-like and are arranged in a series of rings. They are larger than tracheids and are responsible for transporting larger amounts of water. Xylem parenchyma cells help to store and transport minerals and other solutes. Xylem fibers provide structural support to the other xylem cells. Together these cells form a transport system that allows water to move up the plant and helps keep the plant hydrated.
All trees and most other plants
There is a special tissue inside a plant's stem called xylem that consists of cells that are essentially tiny straws that pull water from the plant's roots up to the leaves. It is mostly dead tissue at maturity. Then there is phloem, which carries sugars created by photosynthesis from the leaves down to the roots. It is alive.
The main purpose of cell transplant is to maintain homeostasis. There are two variations of cell transport. These variations are those that don't require energy and those that do require energy.
The main job of the plant transport system, also known as the vascular system, is to transport water, nutrients, and sugars throughout the plant. This system consists of xylem, which transports water and minerals from the roots to the leaves, and phloem, which transports sugars and other organic compounds from the leaves to other parts of the plant.
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Active transport
Cacti get water from rainwater that is stored in the special roots of the cacti
facilitated diffusion
Organs must be preserved in special solutions before their transport to avoid their exposure to bacteria,which may infect them...also keeping organs in specific solutions help to prevent them from denaturing or degrading...
Vesicles move around the cytoplasm so they can get needed nutrients around the cell so the cell can survive. The vesicles do this two ways, they can either be carted by special proteins called Dyein and Kinesin along the cytoskeleton, or they build up a substance called actin to a certain pressure then use it to jet around the cell.
Iron and Calcium
hemoglobin
Contain