Moving plants in December is not ideal, as the colder temperatures and shorter daylight hours can cause stress to the plants. If you must move them, it's best to do it on a mild day and ensure they are replanted in a suitable location with proper care to help them adjust during the winter months. It's often advisable to wait until the spring when the weather is warmer for optimal transplanting conditions.
Animals move to find food, water, shelter, mates, and to avoid predators. Plants move in response to environmental cues such as sunlight (for photosynthesis), gravity (for root growth), and mechanical stimuli (e.g. touch-sensitive plants).
Plants absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Plants don't excel in locomotion, that is, the ability to move on their own. They show a sensitivity to external stimuli, such as food, by consuming it.
no they can not move from one place to another place [except very few cases]
because the sun has to be at a different angle to make it move
plants move through their growth
plants move through their growth
No plants cannot move.
Plants can't move unless somebody picks a flower, or moves a pot they are in
The natural force wind makes the leaves plants move.
Fences , or move the plants.
ground water plants.
Plants cannot move from one place to another place in the way that animals can. Plants are rooted to the ground.
At this time (December 2013), there is no indication that daffodils are transgenic plants.
lashes
potatos
So they can move away from danger. Yet plants have developed ways to protect themselves.