there are plants that can store water, but do not need much to survive, such as a cactus, they also don't have big leaves because that needs more water, and there is a lot of sun in the desert.
Papyrus is one of the most interesting and useful. It is a water reed that was used for making paper in ancient times. Today, it can no longer be found in the wild and only grows where cultivated.
Some producers found in the forest include trees, shrubs, grasses, mosses, and ferns. These plants are able to photosynthesize and convert sunlight into energy, which forms the basis of the food chain in the forest ecosystem.
Temperate forests often contain trees that keep their leaves all year. This includes trees such as oaks, maples, and sequoias.
In the tropics there are no real seasons (as there are in temperate climates) and therefor the plants that grow in the tropics do not show seasonal behaviour. However, in the tropics plants do still have times for flowering, seeding etc. but these are no synchronised across all species. There are also some climates where there are wet (when plants are able to grow) and very dry periods (when plants wither) some plant species are adapted to this variability.
Plants would receive the most sun in a desert environment due to the lack of vegetation and minimal cloud cover, allowing sunlight to penetrate directly to the ground. Woodland forests and ocean floors receive less sunlight as the canopy and water depth reduce the amount of light reaching the plants below.
no trees are plants and some of them dont have flowers
Yes, desert plants carry out photosynthesis.
forests mountin ranges flowers of all kinds decidus trees coneferus trees
Saguaro cactus, sagebrush, creosote, and mesquite. All of which are types of plants in the desert and are considered producers.
Any plant, and only plants, are the producers in a desert.Any plant, and only plants, are the producers in a desert.
Producers in the desert are the same as everywhere else, they are organisms that produce their own food such as plants and trees. Some examples of desert producers would be cacti, shrubsan desert grass.
Producers are plants and include all grasses, shrubs, trees and succulents found in a desert.
People buy all kinds of plants: houseplants, vegetable plants for gardens, fruit trees, nut trees, berry plants, grape plants, landscape plants like trees and shrubs, flowers, vines, ground covers, herbs, and others.
All trees are plants but not all plants are trees.
A desert and rainforest are different because a desert is really dry and a rainforest is so moist and wet. A desert has lot of sand and it there are cactuses all around and a rainforest has plants and trees.
Technically, all of the animals compete for resources as they are all limited. Exspecially for water, camels, desert eagles, barn owls, all of the different kinds of goats, rats, they all compete for water.
No, because not all plants are trees.