no
Yes
Plants absorb carbon dioxide through pores on the leaves or other parts of the plant.
They "eat" plankton that pass through the pores in the sponge. They sift the plankton and absorb it.
Well,roots have tiny pores,so when water goes through the soil and reaches the roots,the pores absorb the water which circulate and go to other parts of the plant.
Well,roots have tiny pores,so when water goes through the soil and reaches the roots,the pores absorb the water which circulate and go to other parts of the plant.
plants can absorb water through tiny pores in their roots. i dont know what the pores are called though. they also gain water by their leaves through holes which are called stroma, this is a gap in the leaf, and is surrounded by Guard Cells.
because it has pores that absorb water
Water can, and does, move through the pores of human skin. Sweat (mostly water) is excreted (out) through skin pores. Additionally, some water is absorbed (in) through the skin pores. However, most water that is absorbed through the skin, enters through the stratum corneum, the outermost layer of the skin. This is what makes skin pruney, when a long time is spent in the water. Human skin can absorb a wide variety of other chemicals, as well. This is why the delivery of some medications is accomplished using a patch.
it depends on how many pores it has
Plants absorb Carbon Dioxide through pores in their leaves and combine it with chloropyl to produce glucose for their nutrition, giving out Oxygen as their waste gas.
It gets out through the nuclear pores and enters the cytoplasm.