Non-Vascular plants have no true roots, leavs, or any structure with tissue, so they transport nutrience from cell to cell.
Answered by:
Treori Davis
5th grade
Centennial place elementary school
Conifer is a vascular plant.
Nonvascular plants lack specialized tissues for nutrient transport, so they rely on osmosis to absorb nutrients from their surroundings. Osmosis allows water and dissolved nutrients to move into the plant cells through diffusion, helping with nutrient uptake and distribution. This process is essential for the survival and growth of nonvascular plants.
A nonvascular plant is a type of plant that lacks specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients, such as xylem and phloem. Examples of nonvascular plants include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. These plants rely on osmosis and diffusion to move water and nutrients within their structures.
Plants absorb nutrients through their roots from the soil. These nutrients are then transported within the plant through specialized tissues called xylem and phloem. Xylem transports water and minerals from the roots to the rest of the plant, while phloem distributes sugars produced by photosynthesis to different parts of the plant.
The difference between vascular and non-vacular plants is that, vascular plants have tubes that carry water up the plant/tree, non-vascular plants dont have those in which case, they need to live near water. Vascular plants are considered the "flowering plant", non-vascular plants have spores and don't need to "mate" with another plant to make a new one, they just need to get their seeds off of them the right way. Vascular plants have a system of cells that transport water through the plant, non-vascular plants do not.
Conifer is a vascular plant.
Nonvascular plants lack specialized tissues for nutrient transport, so they rely on osmosis to absorb nutrients from their surroundings. Osmosis allows water and dissolved nutrients to move into the plant cells through diffusion, helping with nutrient uptake and distribution. This process is essential for the survival and growth of nonvascular plants.
A nonvascular plant is a type of plant that lacks specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients, such as xylem and phloem. Examples of nonvascular plants include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. These plants rely on osmosis and diffusion to move water and nutrients within their structures.
Nonvascular plants do not have a system of tubes to move water and minerals throughout it. these plants are usually plants completely submerged in water.
Substances taken in from the soil, like water and nutrients, enter the plant through the roots. They travel upward through the stem via the xylem vessels, which transport water. Nutrients, on the other hand, move through the phloem vessels to reach different parts of the plant.
Plants absorb nutrients through their roots from the soil. These nutrients are then transported within the plant through specialized tissues called xylem and phloem. Xylem transports water and minerals from the roots to the rest of the plant, while phloem distributes sugars produced by photosynthesis to different parts of the plant.
The difference between vascular and non-vacular plants is that, vascular plants have tubes that carry water up the plant/tree, non-vascular plants dont have those in which case, they need to live near water. Vascular plants are considered the "flowering plant", non-vascular plants have spores and don't need to "mate" with another plant to make a new one, they just need to get their seeds off of them the right way. Vascular plants have a system of cells that transport water through the plant, non-vascular plants do not.
The uptake of nutrients by plant roots is a process called root uptake or absorption. Plant roots take in water and minerals through their root hairs, which then move up through the plant's vascular system to be used for growth and metabolism.
Water, nutrients, and sugar produced during photosynthesis are transported through a plant's vascular system. Water is absorbed by the roots and travels upward through the xylem, while nutrients and sugars move through the phloem to different parts of the plant for growth and energy.
The vascular tissue in plants, known as xylem and phloem, play a crucial role in transporting water, nutrients, and sugars throughout the plant. Xylem carries water and minerals from the roots to the rest of the plant, while phloem transports sugars produced through photosynthesis to different parts of the plant where they are needed.
A non-vascular plant has no specialized conducting tissues, so it usually depends on simple osmosis to move fluids from areas of high water concentration (usually outside the plant) into areas of lower water concentration (the inner tissues of the plant.) Within the plant, the water is then moved from cell to cell. A few mosses have specialized water transport cells that can help with this diffusion.
Do all the plants have tubes that move water and nutrients to all of their organs?