the answer to this question is the circulatory system
Its job is to transport materials throughout an animal, plant, or other cell type. (Not a Prison Cell Though)
Its job is to transport materials throughout an animal, plant, or other cell type. (Not a Prison Cell Though)
Plants have a transport system called xylem and phloem, which transport water and nutrients throughout the plant. Animals have a circulatory system, with blood vessels, heart, and blood that transport oxygen, nutrients, and wastes throughout the body. Plants rely on osmotic pressure and transpiration to move fluids, while animals have a pump (heart) to circulate fluids.
The first animal phylum to have a circulatory system was the Annelida phylum, specifically the earthworm. Annelids have a closed circulatory system composed of blood vessels that transport nutrients and oxygen throughout the body.
Water is an effective solvent.
Materials can move in and out of animal cells through one of two reasons: Passive transport or active transport. Passive transport happens naturally and requires no energy on the part of the cell. It usually happens through osmosis, diffusion, or facilitated diffusion. Active transport involves endocytosis, exocytosis, or molecules moving from a low concentration to high concentration. Active transport requires energy.
What animal gives the frogs there nutrients
Vacuoles
A heterotrophic eukaryote that absorbs nutrients from organic materials in the environment is most likely a fungus. Fungi are known to decompose organic matter and absorb nutrients through their mycelium, which allows them to play a crucial role in nutrient cycling in ecosystems.
Soil is rich with nutrients. Soil also contains organic materials such as water and air, with is a necessity to both human and animal life.
Plants really don't have a circulatory system. Water and nutrients move through a plant by simple physics. It's not pumped anywhere like an animal's circulatory system is.
circulation