under the ground, underneath the money tree. ;)
No, Money plant often has adventitious roots
The money plant is a biennial form of a mustard plant. It has long white roots, like many flowering plants.
The money plant is a biennial form of a mustard plant. It has long white roots, like many flowering plants.
it is having fibrous root system
There are several species commonly called "money plant". You'd need to be more specific which particular one you mean. However, if you find someone who knows the botanical name of your particular plant, it's pretty likely they'll also know if it will grow inside or not.
If one was possible every yard would have a money tree. Dream on since they don't exist.
Money plants have fibrous root systems, which are fine and delicate. They spread out horizontally near the surface of the soil, helping to anchor the plant and absorb water and nutrients efficiently. These roots are not too deep and are great for growing in containers.
Beetroot is the root of a plant, hence the word root!
A beet is technically a root. So the root of the plant is the beet, and whatever that grows out of it is the actual 'plant' portion.
the root does the root does
The root of the plant generally provides water and nutrients to the plant during plant's reproduction.
They are just tiny roots that grow from other roots and look a bit like hair.