Water moves from the soil to the leaves of mesophytes by osmosis and xylem conduction.
<h3>What are mesophytes?</h3>
Mesophytes are plants that are adapted to moderate water environments only. In other words, they cannot survive extremely or extremely wet environments.
Water moves from the soil to the leaves of mesophytes as follows:
1. Water moves into the root hair by osmosis
2. Water is conducted upward from the root hairs by special cells known as xylems.
3. Conducted water reaches various plant parts, including leaves.
More on mesophytes can be found here: brainly.com/question/1047887
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What does your question mean?
<span>Pokaryotes are single cell organisms. Anaerobic prokaryotes use oxygen to obtain energy.</span><span> They use oxygen to perform cellular respiration, so they perform anaerobic respiration.
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<span>Archaea
and eubacteria are prokaryotic in nature. One of the differentiating
characteristics between them is that eubacteria have peptidolycan in their cell
walls.</span>
Answer:
Blood taken from an artery in the leg is oxygenated while blood taken from a vein in the leg is deoxygenated.