It transfers water and nutrients up from the roots to the rest of the plants. I remember this by remembering that between xylem and phloem, the phloem flows down, so the xylem goes up.
Vascular tissue
A carrot is a vascular plant. Vascular plants have lignified tissues, or xylem, for moving water and minerals throughout the plant. They also have a specialized non-lignified tissue, or phloem, to conduct products of photosynthesis.
Phloem and xylem are the two main types of vascular tissue found in plants. Xylem is the tissue that mainly carries water, and a few minerals, in the system. Phloem is the tissue that carries photosynthetic materials through the plant.
Transports water and nutrients upwards
The tissues found in plant veins include xylem, which transports water and minerals from the roots to the rest of the plant, and phloem, which transports sugars produced during photosynthesis to other parts of the plant. These tissues are organized in vascular bundles within the veins of the plant.
Vascular tissues are plant tissues that transport nutrients and water throughout a plant. The two types of vascular tissues are xylem and phloem.
No. Xylem and phloem are belonging to vascular plants only. Bryophytae are not vascular, and do not have these.
The xylem is a nonliving portion of a plant's vascular system responsible for transporting water and minerals from the roots to the rest of the plant.
Vascular tissue
Vascular plants!
Corn is most definitely a vascular plant containing both the vascular tissues xylem and phloem.
Yes, peanut plants have a vascular system that consists of xylem and phloem. Xylem transports water and nutrients from the roots to the rest of the plant, while phloem transports sugars produced during photosynthesis to other parts of the plant.
Phloem
This is the vascular tissue xylem.
Xylem and phloem are typically found in the vascular tissue of plants. In stems, xylem is located towards the center while phloem is closer to the outer edge. In roots, xylem is towards the center and phloem surrounds it.
A carrot is a vascular plant. Vascular plants have lignified tissues, or xylem, for moving water and minerals throughout the plant. They also have a specialized non-lignified tissue, or phloem, to conduct products of photosynthesis.
No! Gymnosperms have xylem and phloem, and are hence "vascular". CRF