Any type of vascular plant.
All plants use xylem and phloem vessels.
phloem and xylem. sorry but that is just my guess
The only two vascular tissues in a seed plant (a plant that produces and grows from a seed) are the xylem and the phloem. The xylem brings water and minerals to the plant while the phloem brings food to the plant.
The circulatory system (including specialized tissues) of plants which provide them with their essential nutrients, also including water and minerals. The xylem lies on the outside of a plant and carries the nutrients up to the parts of the plant (leaves, etc.). The phloem lies towards the inside of the plant and carries the waste back down towards the roots where it leaves the plant.
two types of vascular tissue plants are: plants without seeds and plants with seeds.
tree trunks have xylem and phloem
Functions of xylem and phloem are alike as both transport substances in plants between roots and leaves through stem . Functions are different because xylem transports sap in upward direction while phloem can transport food in both directions up or down as needed .
The root must take the water up to the leaf so that the leaf can do photosynthesis, which means make food for the plant. In order to do this, the root has veins that go directly to the leaves, which we can see as thin lines on the the leaves. There are two types of veins: xylem and phloem. The xylem takes the water up from the roots to the leaves. After the leaf combining the water with other ingredients to do photosynthesis and make a special kind of sugar known as the plant's food, the sugar flows down the phloem to the roots so that the food will be stored for later.
It is not a cell. It is a plant tissue which conducts water
The purpose of the stem are: -for structure -to transport water and nutrients. The stem carries food and water through 2 tissues. (The xylem tissue and the Phloem tissue). The woody kind of stems have lots of xylem tissues, while non-woody stems have less xylem tissues.
Cicadas primarily feed on xylem sap from tree roots, which contains water and nutrients. They use their specialized mouthparts called rostrums to pierce into the xylem vessels and extract the sap. Some species may also consume phloem sap and plant juices.
yes. xylem tracheid occur in all plants included lower plant, gymnosperms and angiosperms. angiosperms had evolved to have another kind of xylem, that is xylem vessel, which is better in transport water, but tracheids still remain in angiosperms.