Yes, if a plasmolysed cell is placed in a hypotonic solution it can recover as a turgid cell.
Plasmolysis contraction of the protoplasm in a living cell when water is removed by exosmosis. The process in which cells lose water in a hypertonic solution.
Animal cells undergo lysis, and plant cells undergo plasmolysis. Lysis occurs when a plant cell explodes due to too much pressure on the inside, and plasmolysis occurs when the vacuole of a plant cell shrinks away from the cell wall due to lack of water.
Plant cells are selected to demonstrate plasmolysis rather than animal cells. This because thy have the ability to absorb water through endosmosis unlike animal cells which would burst.
Due to plasmolysis
Plasmolysis
it is harmful for plants and useful for animals
plasmolysis
Plasmolysis is the contraction of a cells cytoplasm because of water loss.
Plasmolysis might be a disadvantage to a cell when too much water is drawn out of the cell. This could cause the cell to collapse. This rarely happens in nature but can be seen in laboratory testing when the cell is forced into a concentrated saline solution.
Osmosis, or diffusion of water across a membrane, is the process that's happening when a cell's cytoplasm shrinks due to water loss. The process by which a plant cell's cytoplasm shrinks due to water loss is called plasmolysis
Hypertonic solutions are solutions that have a higher concentration than that of its immediate environment. The effects of hypertonic solutions on living cells is crenation in animal cells and plasmolysis in plant cells.
plasmolysis