The amount of water transpired by plants is half of the reactant.
A large tree is capable of holding up to 100 gallons of water. A tree can also discharge this water, making room for more.
I believe 75 gallons a day.
The tree roots help hold the soil together.
extreme, without the proper climate and soil water there is no tree crop production
Cloud! or water
There are 19.2 in each tree. Depending on the size of the tree.
There is one syllable in the word "tree".
Oak Tree A mature oak tree can draw up to 50 or more gallons of water per day. ref: http://www.arcytech.org/
50 i think
It needs 50 gallons of water to transpire each day.It needs 50 gallons of water to transpire each day.It needs 50 gallons of water to transpire each day.It needs 50 gallons of water to transpire each day.
100 gallons (456.61l) per hour during hot desert days
400 liters {105 gal}
35 to 40 gallons
100 gallons.
They hold the tree up and they help the tree get the water and nutrients that it needs.
It obviously depends on the size of the tree
This tree can hold a large number of plates up to 400lbs.
I've been told that sycamore trees drink 500 gallons of water a day. I'm trying to find out for certain, but I know they are VERY heavy when they fall, and they prefer to grow near water. So even if it's not 500 gallons, it's probably a lot more than most trees.
On an average an acre of corn transpires- 3000-4000 gallons a day and a tree can transpire 40000 gallons per year, amounting to approximately 110 gallons a day. Transpiration varies for different types of plants and trees. There are various factors that effect transpiration like weather, type of tree, wind, humidity etc.