methinks you need work on your vocabulary
a vascular plant wouldn't grow on a rock because it has roots and stems
Plants that don't have vascular tissue used to grow up. An example would be moss on a log or rock.
No, rock cap moss is not vascular. It belongs to the group of bryophytes, which are non-vascular plants. Bryophytes, including mosses, lack the specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients that vascular plants possess. Therefore, rock cap moss relies on diffusion for nutrient and water uptake.
plants can cause the weatering of the rock plants may grow on the rock the minerals of rocks are used by the plants
As plants grow out from cracks in rock, they push the rock further apart, and eventually it breaks apart.
No some grow in the ocean i think seaweed grow in holes of the rock
Mold or Moss.
Nonvascular plants, like mosses and liverworts, can grow in new environments because they do not require a vascular system to transport water and nutrients—they can absorb these directly from their surroundings. Their small size and ability to reproduce quickly also contribute to their success as pioneer colonizers in new environments.
No because light and water makes plants grow. (You need to go back to 1st grade)
You know how the soil grows plants like in the rock but if there is no soil then the plant won't grow in the rock.
Yes, it is possible for plants to grow in a patch of stones where weeds grow. That is the notion behind alpine plants in rugged terrain and rock gardening with hardy and native plants. Alpine and rock garden plants grow around, over and under stones with such adaptability and tenacity that they grow in their native ranges and, with the meeting of special growing demands, outside their homelands.
minerals