The taiga biome has long, cold, dry winters and cool, wet summers. In three to four sentences,

describe how the plants and animals would be impacted by a warm and dry summer and how they
might survive. Support your answer with the abiotic factors in the biome.
but make it sound like a 12 year old wrote it

In a warm and dry summer in the taiga biome, the plants and animals would have a tough time. The trees might not get enough water to grow properly, and the leaves could turn brown. Some animals might struggle to find enough food and water, and they could get really thirsty. They might have to travel long distances to find water, or they might even have to hibernate earlier to survive.

The cells in vascular and nonvascular plants are both able to get water, but nonvascular plants

have different methods than vascular plants. How do these differences affect the height of the
plants? In three to five sentences, explain this and be sure to describe how each type of plant gets
water to its cells
but make it sound like a 12 year old wrote it

Vascular plants and nonvascular plants get water to their cells in different ways, and this affects how tall they can grow. Vascular plants have special tubes called xylem that can carry water from the roots all the way to the leaves. This helps them grow really tall because the water can reach all parts of the plant. Nonvascular plants, on the other hand, don't have these special tubes. Instead, they soak up water like a sponge and rely on diffusion to move it around their cells. This makes it harder for them to grow tall because the water can't travel as far.

make it 3 sentences

Vascular plants can grow taller than nonvascular plants because they have special tubes called xylem that carry water from the roots to the leaves. This helps them distribute water throughout the plant and support its growth. Nonvascular plants, lacking these tubes, rely on diffusion to absorb and distribute water, limiting their height.

In one to two sentences, identify the purpose of the roots in a plant and how a disease that harms the roots of a flowering plant would affect the plant’s ability to survive.

make it sound like a 12 year old wrote it please

The purpose of roots in a plant is to anchor the plant in the ground and to absorb water and nutrients from the soil. If a disease harms the roots of a flowering plant, it would be harder for the plant to get enough water and nutrients, and it might not be able to survive because it needs them to grow and stay healthy.

make it 1 and a half sentences long

The roots in a plant help it stay in the ground and get water and food, so if a disease harms the roots of a flowering plant, it would struggle to survive because it needs them to stay healthy and grow.

and for the last question for arca students it is about a rose and this is what i put but i would put all of these in your own words

For defense I see a whole bunch of thorns on the stem on the rose. For survival I also see that if you look close enough to the leaves, you will see on the out side of the leaves on the lining, they are pointy as well and if you have ever touched a rose bush its pointy isn't it. That's how they stay alive for so long is their defense and survival abilities to keep them alive.