vascular tissue gives plants structures and sends the water and minerals to the top.
it is a vascular plant because it can grown bigger than most non vascular plants, which normally grow to 2 to 5 inches tall. non vascular plants asorb water directly through their cells, and that is why they are so small. so of course poison ivy is a vascular plant
Because vascular tissue is the transport system of a plant. if a plant doesn't have vascular tissue it cant transport water and minerals to all parts of the plant if it is big. So the non-vascular plant like moss needs to be small for sufficient distribution of water and minerals etc without a transport system. eg- moss
In the plant kingdom, vascular and nonvascular plants are known as the two types of plant classifications based on the presence or absence of vascular tissue. Vascular plants have specialized tissues for conducting water and nutrients, while nonvascular plants lack these specialized tissues and rely on other means for transportation.
it dosent have roots, stems, or leaves so it NOT a vascular plant. YOUR WELCOME
my understanding is that vascular plants are able to grow tall because of the strength and stability that the vascular tissue provides. so the tall tree in the forest would be a vascular plant
vascular sperm means seed in greek so they must be vascular
An oak tree is just one example of a vascular, or veined, plant. In fact there are a lot more vascular plants than non-vascular, so as long as your plant is not a moss, liverwort or hornwort, it would be considered vascular.
Xylem cells are responsible for supplying water to all parts of the plant. They make up the xylem tube which transports water, but then they die. So the xylem tube which is made up of dead xylem cells is responsible for transport of water in the plant.
Vascular TissueMost seed plants live on land. Recall from Chapter 4 that land plants face many challenges, including standing upright and supplying all their cells with food and water. Like ferns, seed plants meet these two challenges with vascular tissue. The thick walls of the cells in the vascular tissue help support the plants. In addition, food, water, and nutrients are transported throughout the plants in vascular tissue.There are two types of vascular tissue. Phloem (floh um) is the vascular tissue through which food moves. When food is made in the leaves, it enters the phloem and travels to other parts of the plant. Water and minerals, on the other hand, travel in the vascular tissue called xylem (zy lum). The roots absorb water and minerals from the soil. These materials enter the root's xylem and move upward into the stems and leaves.
This lotus and angiosperm processes both vascular tissues; xylem and phloem. So. definitely a vascular plant.
Plants without vascular tissue, like mosses and liverworts, rely on diffusion to transport materials from cell to cell. They are generally small in size and grow in damp environments where water and nutrients can easily reach all parts of the plant.
no, because when i asked if grass is a non-vascular plant they said no and when i checked my science book, it said that angiosperms have monocot and dicot and monocots are like grass, so therefore, grass is not a non-vascular plant