Biology, asked by harshsahab9, 1 month ago

to observe the transportation of water in a flowering/non flowering twig of a plant?


guyysss please answer me​

Answers

Answered by suhailanzarxx1
3

transportion of water in a flowering non flowering teing of a plant

Answered by arshaarunsl
0

Answer:

Flowering plants transport water at a faster rate because of having an additional xylem.

Explanation:

A vascular element is a form of xylem tissue found in flowering plants. Vessel components, like tracheids, die as they reach maturity, but unlike tracheids, they are considerably wider - more like a smoothie straw! They can move more water at a faster because of this.

Diff b/w flowering and non-flowering plants:

  • Flowering plants produce flowers and seeds to reproduce or replicate themselves.
  • Nonflowering plants lack flowers and instead rely on seeds or spores, which are minute fragments of the plant that can be used to reproduce, to make more plants that look like them.

Transportation of water:

Water is conveyed throughout the plant by the combined efforts of individual cells and the vascular system's conductive tissues. Water from the soil enters the root hairs via the apoplast or symplast pathways, travelling along a water potential gradient to the xylem.

#SPJ2

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