Vascular tissue is important to plant evolution because it allowed for them to grow vertically as the tissue allowed for nutrients to be transported all over the organism. Most of your primitive plants are flat with very simple structures.
vascular tissue gives plants structures and sends the water and minerals to the top.
Trans-location of water, minerals and prepared food materials
The "ground" or "ground tissue" is plant tissue is not epidermis or vascular tissue.
Bryophyte
1. The thick walls of the cells in the vascular tissue help to support the plant 2. One type of vascular tissue is phloem, which carries food. 3. Another type of vascular tissue is xylem, which absorbs water and minerals from the soil
No , pores are not vascular tissue, they are just holes. The vascular tissue of a plant is the xylem and the phloem.
The XYLEM.
vascular tissue gives plants structures and sends the water and minerals to the top.
The plant is non vascular. Non vascular means a plant has no v-tissue (vascular tissue) and has no roots or stems. Like moss.
A plant that is not vascular does not have xylem or phloem to carry nutrients throughout the plant. The non vascular plants have a simpler transport system established for water and nutrients required.
A non vascular tissue's cell doesn't contain any water food etc.. and it doesn't have any tube to grow more than a vascular plant.
The "ground" or "ground tissue" is plant tissue is not epidermis or vascular tissue.
In the stem and leaves of plants most of the vascular tissue is found. This vascular tissue is in the form of xylem and phloem.
Vascular tissue
Plants such as carrots or celery stalks are composed of vascular tissue.
"ground" or "ground tissue"
Plant
The vascular tissue system is one of three tissue systems that make up a plant, the other two tissue systems or ground and dermal, with dermal tissue being the outer layer and the ground tissue making up most of the inside of a plant. Vascular tissue is surrounded by ground tissue, but vascular tissue doesn't make up much of the inside of a plant, this is because vascular tissue transports water, mineral nutrient , and organic compounds, to all parts of a plant. Plants don't depend entirely on the vascular tissue system for transportation, the plants themselves can transport any necessary fluids and/or nutrients throughout their systems. A plant's vascular system is composed of two networks of hollow tubes, similar to our veins and arteries. Each network consists of a different type of vascular tissue that works to move different resources throughout the plant. These vascular tissues would be the tissues known as xylem and phloem.
Bryophyte