Commonly cultivated non-green-leafed plants include red maple trees, red nettles and Christmas plants (poinsettias).
Cacti are sometimes bred without chloroplasts to creative decorative multicoloured varieties. These plants are not able to nourish themselves and require growing on a particular medium.
Algae, close relatives of plants, may also have a number of different pigments, including red, brown and yellow colouring.
(The previous answer was "fungi" - I would like to clarify that fungi are not plants, as beautiful and colourful as they can be!)
theoretically green plants contain every color except green, so non green plants in our eyes only contain the color green
the color for phyll is green (coming from the color of chlorophyll- which is for plants that are green).
It is green in color. They make plants green
It is green in color. They make plants green
Green
Plants get their green color from a pigment called chlorophyll, which is found in their chloroplasts. Chlorophyll absorbs sunlight and uses it in the process of photosynthesis to produce energy for the plant.
It means that ferns are green in color. Some plants are not green.
Chlorophyl
all colors are absorbed from the light except the color green, which makes them that color
Chlorophyll absorbs every color of the sunlight except for green. It is green and it cannot absorb its own color.
Chlorophyll is a pigment found in plant cells that absorbs sunlight for photosynthesis. It reflects green light, giving plants their green color.
Because of chlorophyll