Not exactly. Office Plants can be useful to reduce carbon emissions from office machinery. If you are interested in implementing this in your office I recommend speaking to a office plants company, I recommend <a href="http://www.breathing-space.co.uk">Office Plants</a> Supplier Breathing Space, I to wanted to put Office Plants in my office to reduce carbon emissions from the office computers, printers, fax machine etc. They helped me choose plants for my office.
Yes, Alocasia plants can be propagated through division of rhizomes or by planting offsets that grow from the main plant.
It offsets all the carbon we and other animals in the ecosystem exhale. Carbon from the emitted carbon dioxide is taken and used for energy (glucose) production in plants. These plants emit oxygen as waste which we inhale and use for metabolism. This is essentially the carbon and oxygen cycle in our ecosystem but there are other major players as well as other important cycles (like the water and nitrogen cycles) that are intertwined with carbon sequestration. Additionally, carbon sequestration is responsible for lowering atmospheric carbon monoxide levels as well as methane and carbon dioxide levels; two important greenhouse gases.
Plants contain carbon and they eat the plants
No, plants need carbon dioxide.
Plants obtain carbon for photosynthesis from carbon dioxide in the air.
Plants need Carbon for living.Photosynthesis gives carbon for plants.
plants get carbon from 2 /3 of the gas in the world
Plants get these elements from carbon dioxide and water.
Plants absorb carbon dioxide during photosynthesis.
No, Sansevieria plants do not reproduce from spores. Instead, they reproduce by division or through rhizomes that produce offsets or "pups" that can be separated and replanted to grow new plants.
Carbon Dioxide is needed for plants to make food.
Plants take in carbon from carbon dioxide in the air and convert it to carbohydrates and keep it with them.