Dry plant
A dry plant is a plant that grows in dry soil or acid soil. Generally, it has a growth mode that minimizes the loss of water. Plants such as cacti, which can be seen mainly in the desert, are a representative example of the plant. In order to reduce the loss of moisture, the leaves are covered with lead layer, or the leaves are covered with fur to reduce the absorption of sunlight. In the tropics of South Africa, Africa, and Australia, dry soils are extremely dry, so dry grasslands with less trees are developed. This is the so-called savannah, where the trees that grow up in places are fallen in dry season. Most herbaceous plants begin to grow at the beginning of the first year as early as the first year of the year, and bear fruit in the dry season and stay dry in the dry condition. The plants that make up Savannah are almost similar to herbaceous herbaceous plants, and arborea, which grows in some places, is particularly rich in adenoviruses or adventitious species that store water in its stem, and acacia species are also rare.