The roots suck up minerals and water from the soil and help with photosynthesis.
The roots
It's roots.
The roots of a plant is the part that gets water and minerals from the soil.
A plant gets its food mainly from sunlight, and good soil in the ground. They can also suck up water from the ground with their roots.
The roots of a plant.
It gets it through its roots. As the water get passed by. A plant dose not eat, as much as absorb. Fertilizer on the other hand, is mixed with moisture and in the soil gets to the roots of the plant. Then soon, absorbed like water.
A plant's minerals mostly come from the soil i.e. from the ground. A plant gets its food and minerals through several processes including photosynthesis and bio-absorption.
Food gets into a plant through photosynthesis. This method is a type of metabolism that uses the sun's UV rays to work with the soil and water to produce its own energy to thrive and grow.
Yes, a plant gets it's nutrients to grow from water and soil, kind of like we do, besides we don't eat soil and dirt.
a plant "eats" sunlight by absorbing it and making it into sugar and another "food" is soil because soil has nutrients and vitamins and minerals it takes in while absorbing the water it gets from the ground. by 10 year old girl
Well it's simple the plant uses the soil and then the water from the soil goes up the stem and that's how a plant gets its minerals
For the engyer and nuture and stuff, the water and food for the plant is stuck up throught the soil.