If they are removed before or during early germination the seedling will probably die, if they are removed well into germination or after germination then the survival rate of the plant increases as the food in the cotyledons was almost already consumed.
The plant may not enough food reserves to grow properly and die
The plant will eventually die because it has no "land line" the the ground where the soil is.
the plant will die
the phloem will be removed and the plant will die
To find pictures of plants that grow from stems you can type that description into Google Images. The rose is one plant that can grow from a stem.
You can't removed the xylem because the phoem is nearer to the outside of the stem and the zylem is in the midle of the plant
Stem length differ from plant to plant maximum 400 ft in ground plants.
As the new plant grows and produces new leaves, the cotyledons will eventually wither and drop off the stem. With some plants, the cotyledons remain underground and do not emerge as "seed leaves" but they will wither and detach from the stem nevertheless.
the phloem will be removed and the plant will die
Yes; all the unicelullar, colonial and filamentous algae, members of fungi and liverworts are without stem, root and leaf.
what is the plants have no stem
the soil will erode -JV
There are no plants in Alberta that are grown for "stem."
Because nutrients are constantly passing through the stem, when the roots are immersed in soil. The nutrients build up in the stem and cause a blockage, causing the stem to swell.
Erosion, Nutrient depletion, and desertification
A woody stem
Rubarb stem
The ecosystem would not be successful. Eg, plants are eaten by deer. If the plants were removed, the deer would have to look for another food or die.
Woody plants.
The soil will no longer be healthy for plants