ricca and marchantia are two plants without tubes they are also non-vascular
Vascular and non-vascular terminology only applies to plants. Vascular tissue is the water carrying xylem and the sugar transporting phloem, which some plants do not use as they are water plants, or semi-water plants. A virus contains genetic material surrounded by a protein capsid, generally. Some contain reverse transcriptase enzymes, but none could be termed vascular, or non-vascular.
They are similar by how they are multicellular,they have cells that move around in tubes,and they are living organisms.Thank u
One similarity is that we both have tubes (xylem and phloem for plants, blood vessels for humans) that makes the nutrients and the medium (water for plants, blood for humans) flow around our body.
No water plants do not depend on tadpoles in any way because tadpoles get their energy from water plants themselves
Plants such as seaweed, duckweed, algae, water lilies, etc. It all depends on whether it is fresh water or salt water.
Plants with tubes for carrying food and water are known as vascular plants. These include ferns, gymnosperms (such as conifers), and angiosperms (flowering plants). The tubes responsible for transporting water are called xylem, while the tubes for transporting food are called phloem.
vascular
yes it is and xylem is for the water carrying tubes
Plants have specialized tubes called xylem that transport water from the roots to the leaves. These tubes create a continuous column of water due to adhesion and cohesion forces. Water is absorbed by the roots and moves up the xylem through capillary action, supporting the plant's structure and facilitating the exchange of gases.
True. Plants with tubes to transport water and nutrients are called vascular plants. These tubes are known as xylem (for water) and phloem (for nutrients) and allow for efficient distribution of resources throughout the plant.
The transport systems. They are called water carrying tubes and food carrying tubes. they transport the substances absorbed by the roots.
This is the vascular tissue xylem.
Plants that have conducting tubes for water and nutrients are called vascular plants. These include ferns, gymnosperms (such as conifers), and angiosperms (flowering plants). The conducting tubes are known as xylem (for water and minerals) and phloem (for sugars and other organic compounds).
This vascular tissue is called xylem.
vascular
Plants that do not have a system of tubes for transporting water and nutrients are called non-vascular plants. These plants rely on osmosis and diffusion for internal transport of materials. Some examples include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts.
The xylem and phloem tube is called the Vascular Bundle.