Yes and no. It carries nutrients and electrolytes that is absorbed from your intestines.
true
Yes, "plasma" is the term for the main component of blood, and it carries nutrients. However, it is a liquid, not a plasma.
the digestive system takes in food needed by the body then it breaks down the food into a form the body cells can use
The first task of the digestive system is to break down food into a fine pulp (mechanical digestion). When the food is physically broken down, digestive chemicals break the food down into small molecules (chemical digestion). The mouth is the organ in which the process of digestion begins.(Google)
It Is used to carry the bolus of food from the mouth to the stomach.
The digestive tract that carries food includes the mouth, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small intestine and large intestine. Other organs, such as the pancreas, are part of the digestive system, but don't carry the food.
yes,plasma makes up a little more than half of the blood. Your blood has several different parts. Each part has a different job. The biggest part of your blood is a straw-colored liquid which is plasma. The cells in your body depend on the blood's plasma to carry food from the digestive system to your cells. Plasma also carries away waste from the cells.
Normally we would say that nutrients are carried in the blood, but you are correct, it is the plasma portion of the blood that carries nutrients, as compared to the red blood cells which carry oxygen.
The digestive system processes food that is put into your body. The digestive system processes the food by breaking it down and absorbing the nutrients.
The digestive system is the system that makes food absorbable into the body
your digestive system beaks down food.
The digestive system has smooth muscle through out it, and they help move the food.