Yes. The process is driven at the roots by osmosis, where the increased pressure of solutes causes the nutrients to enter the plant, and they travel within the plant, and at the leaf phase, the water evaporates from the stomata thus providing a second driving force.
Vascular tissue also allows plants to grow nice and tall (essentially, it's what wood is made of), and it allows them to live far from water. If it weren't for vascular tissue, plants would just be algae and moss.
All angiospermic plants produce flowers and have vascular tissue.
All over the body except on the cornea of the eye. Oxygen diffuses directly from the air to corneal cells to keep the cornea transparent. There are fewer blood vessels in connective tissue and bone than in high metabolic areas such as muscle cells and organ cells, but blood vessels (vascular tissue) is found all over the body. If you mean plants, that's a different category, but xylem and phloem are the vascular tissues of plants, found from roots through stem to leaves. In woody plants, this thin layer of tissue is found right under the bark.
Mosses are non-vascular because they have no vascular tissue inside of them. That is why mosses need to live near moist areas so they can absorb the water directly because they don't have long roots to absorb the water.
Yes, the sensitive plant, more commonly called the TickleMe Plant, is a vascular plant.Rrelated Information:TickleMe Plants are flowering plants, producing cotton candy like pink flowers.All flowering plants are angiosperms. All angiosperms are vascular plants.Vascular plants like the TickleMe, have specialized tissue that allows the plant to circulate chemicals throughout the plant.The TickleMe Plant closes its leaves and lowers its branches when touched. This is the result of the increased pressure in its cells, made possible in part by the vascular tissue.
Plants such as carrots or celery stalks are composed of vascular tissue.
In the stem and leaves of plants most of the vascular tissue is found. This vascular tissue is in the form of xylem and phloem.
Whisk ferns are seedless vascular plants that only have vascular tissues in their stem.
stem Through vascular tissue of phloem
Divots, or the spaces created in the stem of certain plants, typically do not contain vascular tissue scattered throughout. Vascular tissue, which includes xylem and phloem, is usually organized in distinct patterns within the stem, such as in bundles or rings, rather than being randomly scattered. In most plants, this organization is crucial for efficient transport of water, nutrients, and photosynthates. Therefore, divots themselves do not house vascular tissue; they are simply areas where the stem's surface may be altered or damaged.
Vascular plants have vascular tissue .
vascular plants
The vascular tissue in the stem is found in the steler region. It extends from the conducting cells of the seedling.
vascular bundle
Vascular tissue
It is called vascular plants
• Nodal anatomy reflects how the vascular tissue of the stem interconnects with the vascular tissue of the leaf.