what are hydrophytes?
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Answer:
a plant which grows only in or on water.
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Hydrophyte Plant
Explanation:
- Hydrophytic plant that develops incompletely or entirely in water whether established in the mud, as a lotus, or gliding without port, as the water hyacinth. sea-going plant and hydrophyte.
- Sea-going plants will be plants that have adjusted to living in oceanic situations.
- A macrophyte is an oceanic plant that develops in or close to water and is either rising, submergent, or skimming.
- Hydrophytes are plants like water lilies that have adjusted to living in watery conditions.
- They have practically zero root frameworks and have leaves that frequently help in buoyancy.
- Xerophytes are something contrary to hydrophytes, and are plants adjusted for living in very dry conditions with little access to water.
- These plants require exceptional adjustments for living submerged in water, or at the water's surface that the most widely recognized adjustment is aerenchyma, yet gliding leaves and finely dismembered leaves are additionally normal.
- Four sorts of hydrophytic, or sea-going, plants exist new, gliding, submerged and green growth.
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