The only two vascular tissues in a seed plant (a plant that produces and grows from a seed) are the xylem and the phloem. The xylem brings water and minerals to the plant while the phloem brings food to the plant.
Meristematic tissue develops into epidermal tissue, vascular tissue, and ground tissue. Epidermal tissue forms the outer layer of the plant, vascular tissue conducts water and nutrients, and ground tissue provides support and storage.
Vascular plants are plants that have transport tissues for carrying water, nutrients, and sugar to plant cells. Because they have transport tissues, many vascular plants can become very large. An example of a vascular plant is a full grown tree. The transport tissues form a system of tubes tat extends from the roots to all parts of the plant. These tubes are made up of two kinds of tissue: xylem and phloem. Xylem tissue carries water and nutrients from the roots to the leaves. Phloem tissue carries sugar from the leaves to other cells of the plants. Non vascular plants are plants that lack tissues that transport water, nutrients, and sugar. Some example of non vascular plants are mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. Non vascular plants don't have tissues to carry the materials that cells need to stay healthy. Because of this, they don't grow very large. These plants don't have true roots to absorb water. Instead, each cell absorbs the water and nutrients it needs directly from the soil or air. Because they tend to live very close together, the cells of these plants may also get materials they need from neighboring plant cells.
Human bodies are conformed of 4 basic kinds of tissue. Those are Nervous Tissue, Epithelial Tissue, Connective Tissue and Muscular Tissue. Connective tissue is the most abundant and widely spread and the one that performs more different functions.
It is the phloem. The stem connects all the plant parts. And in the stem are two kinds of tubes: the xylem and the phloem. The xylem transports water and mineral salts from the roots to the rest of the plant. The phloem transports food from the leaves to the rest of the plant. Sugar is considered to be food for plants and therefore the answer is the phloem. If you need not specific details, the stem would be an okay answer.
This variation in results when different plants were used indicates that not all plants produce the same substance that makes the candle burn. Different plants may release different gases or compounds that can affect the length of time the candle remains lighted. This underscores the importance of conducting experiments with various plant types to further understand the production of this vital substance.
epidermis, vascular, and something else...
There is ground, vascular, and dermal.
none
There are three main types of plants: vascular plants (having vascular tissues for water and nutrient transport), non-vascular plants (lacking vascular tissues), and seed plants (reproducing through seeds). Each type has various subcategories based on characteristics like reproduction, size, and habitat.
invertebrates
vascular
vascular
The two kinds of seedless vascular plant that human can eat are fiddlehead and young horsetail
Here are a few:Seedless Non vascular Plants:Bryophytes:MossesLiverwortsHornwortsSeedless Vascular Plants:LycophytesClub MossesSpike MossesQuil MossesPterophytesFernsWhisk FernsHorsetails
Meristematic tissue develops into epidermal tissue, vascular tissue, and ground tissue. Epidermal tissue forms the outer layer of the plant, vascular tissue conducts water and nutrients, and ground tissue provides support and storage.
plants only have three kinds of tissues epidermal vascular and ground tissues ground tissues are parenchyma ,callenchyma and , sclerrenchyma
plants only have three kinds of tissues epidermal , vascular and ground tissues ground tissues are--parenchyma, collenchyma and sclerenchyma