Desert ecosystem have plants with wide spreading roots and spiny leaves.
Plants in a desert ecosystem are likely to have adaptations to conserve water, such as thick waxy coatings or small leaves, while plants in a rainforest ecosystem will have adaptations for high moisture levels, like broad leaves or aerial roots. Desert plants also often have deeper root systems to reach water sources underground, whereas rainforest plants may rely more on shallow roots to access nutrients in the topsoil.
Algae and mosses are two examples of plants that can lack true stems, roots, and leaves. These plants typically have simple structures that allow them to absorb nutrients and carry out photosynthesis.
Plants that lack true stems, roots, and leaves are called thallophytes. These plants have a simple structure without distinct organs like stems and leaves. Examples include algae and fungi.
Examples of plants that have roots, stems, and leaves but do not produce seeds are flowers. Flowers have roots, stems, and leaves; and reproduce by pollination with the help of bees, and other insects.
The force that moves water from the roots to the leaves in plants is called transpiration. This process is driven by a combination of factors, including evaporation from the leaves, cohesion and adhesion of water molecules, and the tension created in the xylem vessels.
Perhaps. There are water plants however that have roots, stems, and leaves.
There are many things a plants roots do for an ecosystem. Plants roots help prevent erosion of soil for example.
no leaves are a component of plants (stems, leaves and roots)
it depends
Xylem are small tubes in vascular plants that carry water up from the roots to its leaves etc
Nonvascular plants.
Desert
no it occurs in the leaves
wide-spreading, shallow roots
Xylem tissue carries material from a plant's roots to it's leaves
Plants in a desert ecosystem are likely to have adaptations to conserve water, such as thick waxy coatings or small leaves, while plants in a rainforest ecosystem will have adaptations for high moisture levels, like broad leaves or aerial roots. Desert plants also often have deeper root systems to reach water sources underground, whereas rainforest plants may rely more on shallow roots to access nutrients in the topsoil.
they connect the roots to the leaves and hold the plant up they carry the food to the leaves from the roots