Some plants that can be found in the Iranian desert include orchids, willow, and walnut.
There is a wide variety of plants found in the Canadian rockies. Some of the plants found in the Canadian rockies are the Lodge pole pine,Alfalfa,alpine buttercup,and dwarf willows.
Yes, there are some plants in the desert with long leaves. A few examples:Palm treesYuccasSotol
explain why similar plants and animals found in the continents of africa , south america,australia and india
I believe the decomposers found in the Andes are grubs and Morel
Spores
Close to sources of water.
Yes, Nonvascular Plants do not have vessels. Nonvascular plants are found in damp environments and are only a few cells thick, so they are able to absorb water and nutrients from it directly through their cell walls. Vascular plants are more complex and are thick, so they need vessels to get their water and nutrients. See related question
Moss is a nonvascular plant. They lack some of the more elaborate adaptations to dry environments that are found in the vascular plants, and so must live in a moist environment.
they are found growing the roots of plants e.g. cress
Growing indigenous plants help to cut down on the ability of invaders to spread. These plants also maintain the integrity of the land they are found on.
The dessert.
Nonvascular
These have found a "foothold" in small cracks.
Non-vascular plants are those that do not have a system to transport water and nutrients from the roots to the stems; normally they rely on osmosis for this this function. Due to this limitation the plants tend to be small, thin walled, grow in clusters and are often found in the close proximity to water. An example is the moss plant
Though really in a separate category, you may consider lichens to be among the slowest-growing of plants. These are actually a symbiont of a fungi and an algae. Some of the slowest-growing ones are found in the Antarctic, where they are found inside rocks, and that habitat, coupled with the temperature, means these are extremely slow in growth.
littoral