Transpiration
Glucose is transported through the plant's vascular system, specifically through the phloem.
Vascular Plants also known as Tracheophytes
vascular plants
non vascular
In botany, vascular tissues include xylem and phloem. Xylem is the type of vascular tissue that moves water and dissolved nutrients from the roots to the leaves. The xylem are one-way roads, however. No particles can move down the tree through the xylem. Phloem are the tubes in plants responsible for transporting sugars from the leaves to the roots and vice-versa. These are the tubes that are like normal roads. The sugars in the phloem are able go from the roots to the leaves and from the leaves to the roots. In subjects other than botany, I have no idea what vascular tissue is used for. Hopefully the information I gave you is what you needed.
It is vascular because it has vascular tubes to support and transfer food through and out of the plant.
Xylem tubes of vascular bundles of stems. :)
The bronchial tubes connect the trachea and the lungs. Air moves through these tubes into and out of the lungs.
i think a nonvascular does have stomata becuz they have to be able to breath and stay alive in order to develop spores.they have to go through a life cycleand gthey drop spores and the sproes have to grow in the ground or sprout.then they grow a plant that comes out of a spore.spores can be transpoted to any where they go .they can get carried by wind,birds or water as long they are in the ground .
You can see a celery's vascular tubes.
veins and arteries
Glucose is transported through the plant's vascular system, specifically through the phloem.
Vascular Plants also known as Tracheophytes
Tubes
vascular plants
non vascular
The vascular tissue called the phloem.