Land with little rain and few plants is called a desert. If the temperatures are not extreme, the land could be a steppe.
Plants began to grow on land approximately 470 million years ago during the Ordovician period. The earliest land plants were non-vascular and similar to modern mosses, adapting to terrestrial environments. Over time, these primitive plants evolved, leading to the development of more complex vascular plants, which played a crucial role in shaping terrestrial ecosystems.
Green algae, particularly charophytes, are considered to be the closest relatives and ancestors of land plants. They share many characteristics with land plants, such as similar chloroplast structure and reproductive features. This close evolutionary relationship suggests that land plants evolved from green algae.
Terrestrial plants include all plants that live and reproduce on the land. There are many terrestrial plants as well as many aquatic plants.
Did not grow very tallORHad thin leavesORlived in close contact with wateryo mom son
plants??
Fertile land grows plants more easily. We eat these plants which help us to grow, and if we don't eat these plants we will not grow, will not get the nutrients that these plants give us and we will grow sick and eventually, die.
Plants are living things.Some plants grow on land and some grow in water.They are of different shapes and sizes.
depends on the plant; most plants that are adapted to land are not able to grow in the water. water plays an important function for those plants to grow in the water- sometimes serving as mechanism for reproduction, absorption of nutrients, and as a stuctural support to hold up the plant, etc. See the link: look at the structures and read the key characteristics of the plant groups. There is a gradual shift in plants evidencing the evolutionary path from water to land and the characteristics that make certain plants more suitable for specific environments. http://mattdegasperi.synthasite.com/resources/DifferencesinLandandWaterPlants.ppt
aquatic vegetation are plants that grow underwater while vegetation are plants that just grow on land.
Biofuel doesn't grow anywhere, it comes from plants that have the characteristics and compounds that enable them to be used for biofuel. Such plants include corn, canola, sunflowers, and rapeseed.
Plants cannot grow there and the land wont have a lot of nutreints.
I think it depends on what plants you are talking about because some rice plants grow best in flooded land but a lot of plants will die with out soil.
Underwater bamboo plants have unique characteristics such as their ability to grow quickly, their strong and flexible stems, and their ability to provide shelter for aquatic animals.
Yes, eg the mangrove.
I believe the answer is wetlands.
by freezing the land and not leting plants grow