Sugar in plants is transported through tubes called phloem, which run from leaves (where sugar is produced through photosynthesis) to other parts of the plant. This process is facilitated by the process of translocation, powered by pressure gradients and special proteins that help move sugars from source to sink tissues within the plant.
Yes because it is nutrition for the flower. Florists offer food with sugar and other things to help them last longer. Sugar water does not work for regular plants though. It will clog their roots and stop as much water being absorbed.
The movement of sugars through the phloem is called translocation. This process involves the transport of sugars, primarily sucrose, from sources (areas of photosynthesis or sugar storage) to sinks (areas of active growth or storage). Translocation is facilitated by specialized cells called sieve-tube elements in the phloem.
Sunlight provides the energy needed for photosynthesis, which produces sugars that are translocated throughout the plant to support growth and metabolism. Sunlight also helps regulate the rate of translocation by influencing the opening and closing of stomata, which can affect the movement of water and nutrients within the plant. In general, sunlight is essential for healthy translocation in plants.
In vascular plants, phloem is the living tissue that carries organic nutrients (known as photosynthate), in particular, glucose, a sugar, to all parts of the plant where needed. The phloem is concerned mainly with the transport of soluble organic material made during photosynthesis. This is called translocation.
Sugar in plants is transported through tubes called phloem, which run from leaves (where sugar is produced through photosynthesis) to other parts of the plant. This process is facilitated by the process of translocation, powered by pressure gradients and special proteins that help move sugars from source to sink tissues within the plant.
Sugar will give the flower a boost but to mach will kill it so put only half a cup
absorption and translocation
SUCROSE! good luck on your exam :)
Sugar moves from the parts where it is produced (sources) to the places where it is needed (sink).
Yes, Haworthia plants do flower.
Yes, potato plants do flower.
Yes because it is nutrition for the flower. Florists offer food with sugar and other things to help them last longer. Sugar water does not work for regular plants though. It will clog their roots and stop as much water being absorbed.
Otis Freeman Curtis has written: 'The translocation of solutes in plants' -- subject(s): Motion of fluids in Plants
The movement of sugars through the phloem is called translocation. This process involves the transport of sugars, primarily sucrose, from sources (areas of photosynthesis or sugar storage) to sinks (areas of active growth or storage). Translocation is facilitated by specialized cells called sieve-tube elements in the phloem.
Leaching is another word for translocation.
John A. Raven has written: 'Energetics and transport in aquatic plants' -- subject(s): Aquatic plants, Bioenergetics, Physiology, Plant translocation