The xylem and phloem of the stem
Glucose is transported to all the parts in the plant,especially the Mesophyll Spongy Layer..which is on top on the stomata and guard cells.It's transported to feed the plant.It is not transported as glucose because its very reactive and can get into chemical reactions where its not needed or wanted.And might be lost.Its converted to starch to be stored or used for energy.Dont want to get into detail.Jazakallahu Khair.
Glucose is found in the solid state and is transported to all the parts of a plant.
The glucose molecules originally travel into the plant through its cells' membranes. The glucose then travels throughout the plants by means of the plants "capilaries."
Glucose is transported through the plant's vascular system, specifically through the phloem.
It is an organelle. It produces glucose through photosynthesis.
1)through wind 2)through animals
Photosynthesis produces O2 and Glucose which the plant equivalent of human defecation.Photosynthesis is the conversion of sunlight into ATP. ATP is used and burned inside the plan. What's is left is the unusable parts of the process which is converted to O2 and Glucose and released from the plant. We in turn breath in the O2 and exchange it for CO2, which the plant need for photosynthesis.
A plant produces oxygen and carbohydrates, such as sucrose, glucose, or starch during photosynthesis.
A plant is essentially a glucose production and storage system from the very tips of the leaves to the roots within the ground. As glucose is produced, it feeds the plant and is then gradually converted into various other nutrients that are crucial to the plant’s survival, growth and eventual reproduction.
Known as chloroplasts, these are the green parts of the plant, and contain chlorophyll.
These parts are the leaves.
The carbon dioxide in the air that the plant takes in through it's stomata.