The California Redwood is definitely a vascular plant. The Redwood has both types of vascular tissue; xylem and phloem.
Pollen is nonvascular, as it is a structure produced by seed plants for reproduction and does not contain any conducting tissues like xylem or phloem found in vascular plants.
Nonvascular plants dont have xylem and phloem, whereas seed plants have vascular bundles
Vascular plants have specialized tissues for conducting water and nutrients throughout the plant, allowing for greater size and complexity compared to nonvascular plants, which lack these tissues. Vascular plants also have true roots, stems, and leaves, while nonvascular plants usually have simpler structures like rhizoids for anchorage. Vascular plants reproduce through seeds or spores, while nonvascular plants rely on spores for reproduction.
vascular- most nonvascular plants are small grass type plates that don't have phloem and xylem
No, they have roots and stems and vascular tissue
Within vascular plants is the phloem, the vessel that transports food, and the xylem, which transports water. Nonvascular plants are small, simple plants without a vascular system. They do not have a phloem or xylem.
A buckeye is vascular, meaning it has specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients throughout the plant. This vascular system consists of xylem for water transport and phloem for nutrient transport.
The California Redwood is definitely a vascular plant. The Redwood has both types of vascular tissue; xylem and phloem.
Pollen is nonvascular, as it is a structure produced by seed plants for reproduction and does not contain any conducting tissues like xylem or phloem found in vascular plants.
Nonvascular plants dont have xylem and phloem, whereas seed plants have vascular bundles
Pine trees are vascular plants because these have well defined xylem and phloem tissues.
nonvascular
A bluebonnet is a vascular plant. Vascular plants have specialized tissues that transport water and nutrients throughout the plant. Bluebonnets, like other flowering plants, have vascular tissues in the form of xylem and phloem.
It must be vascular because the pictures show it to be a tall flowering plant. All nonvascular plants are small and grow close to the ground since they lack phloem and xylem
Vascular plants have specialized tissues for conducting water and nutrients throughout the plant, allowing for greater size and complexity compared to nonvascular plants, which lack these tissues. Vascular plants also have true roots, stems, and leaves, while nonvascular plants usually have simpler structures like rhizoids for anchorage. Vascular plants reproduce through seeds or spores, while nonvascular plants rely on spores for reproduction.
i was just in science class to today and talked about grass. i asked my teacher if grass was nonvascular or vascular. his answere was a slap on the head and said no its non because it has no place for the xylem or phlom