Plants are generally considered immobile because they remain rooted in one place throughout their life cycle. However, they do exhibit some forms of movement, such as growing toward light (phototropism) or water (hydrotropism), and certain species can move their leaves or flowers in response to environmental stimuli. Overall, while plants can respond to their environment, their lack of locomotion classifies them as immobile.
Copper is essential for plant growth and is mobile within plants, meaning it can be transported to where it is needed. However, excess copper can be toxic to plants and can accumulate in tissues, so proper regulation of copper levels is important for plant health.
Antonyms for the word mobile: fixed, immobile, stable, stationary, unmovable
Some are mobile (called motility, by using flagella or cilia) while some are immobile.
Mobile nutrients in plants are able to move within the plant to where they are needed, while immobile nutrients remain in one place. This impacts their availability for uptake and utilization because mobile nutrients can be redistributed to different parts of the plant as needed, while immobile nutrients must be taken up by the roots in the specific location where they are needed. This can affect the overall health and growth of the plant, as a deficiency in immobile nutrients may not be easily corrected once symptoms appear.
immobile
It might make immobile technology obsolete.
Protists are both mobile and stationary.
Plants are immobile.
Global Mobile Nobel
Viruses are immobile. They can not move on their own, and rely on their hosts biological systems to move them around.
A synonym for immobile is immovable. An antonym for immobile is mobile.
* immobile * unmoving * stationary * standstill * in place