yes, because it is also water
Minerals are dissolved in rainwater. The plant absorbs the water through its root system. Water is transported throughout the plant by capillary action - which draws the water upwards (like sucking on a straw)
Water a pitcher plant by keeping the soil consistently moist but not waterlogged. Use distilled or rainwater to avoid mineral buildup. Water the plant from the top, allowing excess water to drain out of the bottom of the pot. Avoid letting the plant sit in standing water.
To prepare rainwater to distilled water, you can collect rainwater and then distill it using a distillation apparatus. This involves heating the rainwater to create steam, which is then condensed back into water, leaving impurities behind. The distilled water collected will be free of contaminants present in the original rainwater.
Yes because rain water has much more nutrients than tap water. If you were to put tap water in a plant all the led and the backteria is going into your plant. If it is a bean plant and you're putting tap water in a edible plant then you are going to eat the backteria that is in the tap water.
usually if you pee on it after drinking beer all night, then plants will grow to epic porportions.
rainwater
Rainwater is distelled water and tankwater is used for home porpes
They use rainwater which travels up the stem to the leaves to give them nutrients and help the plant grow.
Distilled water is least likely to be rainwater, as it is purified through a process of distillation that removes impurities and minerals present in rainwater.
Yes. Rainwater is the combination of the words rain and water.
Rainwater tanks are used to catch rainwater which falls from the sky when precipitation occurs. This is a great water saving device which can cut the cost of your water bills.
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