They evolved to fill the niches found on land.
Cohesion and adhesion through xylem tissue. At least, that's the primary mechanism for complex plants. For simpler plants (e.g. mosses), it's mostly just a matter of diffusion.
Chemical nutrients can move through an ecosystem through plants. The plants can extract chemical nutrients from the ground and when animals eat green plants, they transfer from plants to animals.
Shade-houses are important in plant production as they afford protection from sun and wind to newly propogated plants, allowing them time to acclimatise to outdoor conditions. Normally a propogated plant would be moved out from a production area to an area with 70 0r 80% shade, after a period there it would be moved to an area with 30% shade and thereafter into the full sun. Percentages of shade and duration of acclimitisation vary from species to species.
Where the land was covered by the ice sheets, there were no organisms (apart form some unicellular plants in the top layer of ice.
Because they do not have foot
adaptive radiation formed mant new land plant species
radiation can travel through air
Electromagnetic waves
It is moved by Diffusion, Radiation, and Convection.
I think it might be by radiation?
radiation
In animals,they are moved by blood mainly.In plants they are moved by xylem,pholem etc
Radiation, or radiant energy.
Radiation poisoning moved around the world by the wind.
Light is an electromagnetic radiation moved as photons (of zero particle mass)
because they are strong
Heat can travel by conduction, convection and radiation in liquids and gases.