"Vasculer" is a French verb that translates to "to vascularize" in English, referring to the process of forming blood vessels or the development of a vascular system. In a broader context, it can also imply the distribution or organization of something in a network-like manner, similar to how blood vessels distribute blood throughout the body. The term is often used in medical and biological contexts.
non vasculer plants have tubes but vasculer plants do
plants make own food living
Angiosperms, the most numerous plants on earth, are seed-producing plants that have flowers and produce fruit which surround the seeds. Gymnosperms are have "naked" seed and include conifers and ginkgo plants.
Yes, roses are vascular plants. They belong to the group of flowering plants known as angiosperms, which have specialized tissues for transporting water, nutrients, and sugars throughout the plant. This vascular system consists of xylem and phloem, enabling roses to thrive in various environments by efficiently managing their internal resources.
Yes, an African violet [Saintpaulia spp] is an angiosperm. It's a flowering plant that produces seeds. Along with gymnosperms, angiosperms represent the division of flowering plants within the plant kingdom. But angiosperms differ from gymnosperms by having such characteristics as flowering and fruiting with seeds.
Nope!!! Some do but not all. All animals do though. Plants that do are called vasculer. Those that don't are invascular. Moss, algea, and others are invascular.
Wood is neither, wood is composed of tissue created vasculer bundles. This tissue is called secondary xylem, the two types of water conducting cells that make up secondary xylem are tracheids and vessel elemeants.
It mean what you don't what does it mean.
Mean is the average.
What does GRI mean? What does GRI mean?
The correct usage is "what DOES it mean"
The haudensaunee mean irguios