It develops special roots which penetrate into the host plant. The food is generally stored in the stem or the roots of the plant.
A dodder is a parasitic plant without chlorophyll. It obtains its food by twining around host plants (clovers, alfalfa, and lespedeza), and sending root-like projections into their stems.
the non-green plants which live on other living organisms and obtain food from them are called parasitic plants
Dodder plants are parasitic and do not photosynthesize, so they do not produce their own food. They derive nutrients by attaching to host plants and extracting their nutrients. Therefore, dodder plants are not typically consumed as food by humans.
Dodder is a total parasite . It is because the dodder plants absorbs water,mineral as well as food from the host. A partial parasite absorbs only water and minerals from the host as partial parasites contain chlorophyll.
Some examples of plants that do not have chlorophyll but live in the environment are Indian pipe (Monotropa uniflora) and dodder (Cuscuta spp.). These plants are parasitic and obtain nutrients from other plants instead of through photosynthesis.
The parasitic plant you are referring to is likely the "Dodder" (Genus: Cuscuta). Dodder lacks chlorophyll, so it wraps itself around host plants to obtain nutrients and water. It has a distinctive yellow, slender, and tubular stem.
the non-green plants which live on other living organisms and obtain food from them are called parasitic plants
Dodder plants are parasitic plants that lack chlorophyll, so they cannot photosynthesize. Instead, they use specialized structures called haustoria to penetrate and extract nutrients from host plants. Dodder plants wrap themselves around host plants, forming connections that allow them to absorb nutrients and water directly from the host.
Dodder plants are parasitic and do not photosynthesize, so they do not produce their own food. They derive nutrients by attaching to host plants and extracting their nutrients. Therefore, dodder plants are not typically consumed as food by humans.
Dodder is a parasite, it obtains its food from feeding off other plants, it does not produce its own
Dodder is a total parasite . It is because the dodder plants absorbs water,mineral as well as food from the host. A partial parasite absorbs only water and minerals from the host as partial parasites contain chlorophyll.
Plant obtain their food from the sun. The process is called photosynthesis. Animals obtain their food from animals or plants.
Some examples of plants that do not contain chlorophyll are Indian pipe, pine saprophyte, and dodder. These plants obtain nutrients by parasitizing other plants rather than through photosynthesis.
Cuscuta is commonly known as dodder. It is a parasitic plant. It attaches itself to other plants and obtains its food from the host plant. The dodder produces haustoria that insert themselves into the vascular system of the host plant.
Parasitic plants. They rely on the host plant for water, nutrients, and sometimes structural support. Examples include mistletoe and dodder.
Some examples of plants that do not have chlorophyll but live in the environment are Indian pipe (Monotropa uniflora) and dodder (Cuscuta spp.). These plants are parasitic and obtain nutrients from other plants instead of through photosynthesis.
The parasitic plant you are referring to is likely the "Dodder" (Genus: Cuscuta). Dodder lacks chlorophyll, so it wraps itself around host plants to obtain nutrients and water. It has a distinctive yellow, slender, and tubular stem.
Mistletoe, Witchweed, Dodder