North of the Antarctic Peninsula there are moss carpets, only two species of native vascular plants, and lichen may occur in some places. For the rest of Antarctica, patches of tussock grass on islands north of the pack ice.
monosis
A plant that grows in the far north, where no other plant can grow, is lichen.
There are no tropical plants in Antarctica. Antarctica is a polar continent and essentially nothing grows there.
the plant on which it grows has little or no chloroplast.
The fastest plant is a "bean plant". ....... Beans do grow fast from seed, but so do radishes. Many bamboo plants are noted for their quick growth, as are several types of kelp. But anyone in the southern United States would not rule Kudzu out either.
Guava grows up to be a small tree. The habitat is the tropic.
There is no 'foliage' in Antarctica, though there are a few hardy mosses and grasses that grow on some of the outlying islands.
A Palm Tree
Mosses.
No fern grows -- nothing grows -- in Antarctica. It's too cold and there is no irrigation.
White Jasemine
Nothing grows on Antarctica: it's too cold and dry.
answer: yes, a plant that grows in sand grows stronger than a plant that grows in cotton or soil. =)
cactus or grass grow in places that have albumant sunlight
Small, strong plants such as lichens and mosses can grow there.
A plant that grows in the far north, where no other plant can grow, is lichen.
chicken
Nothing. Nothing grows in Antarctic. Edited answer: Some algal forms and bacteria have been reported growing in Antarctica.