No,They are always producing Oxygen.No. The more leaves the more oxygen.
No
You cannot determine which top ten trees produce the most oxygen. It does not go by the type of tree as much as it goes by the individual tree. A tree's age, and health impact how much oxygen is produced.
50yrs
It requires 22 trees to produce the amount of oxygen consumed by one person. (An acre of trees produces enough oxygen for 18 people). This data comes from the Northwest Territories Forest Management site. Approximately 2 Moles per second Not all trees produce the same amount of oxygen in the same amount of time. 'Evergreen' trees for example generally produce less oxygen per hour than their leafy cousins per time interval generally, however they do continue producing oxygen when their leafy cousins lose their leaves in the autumn, and to a point even well into the cold of winter in many areas. The more green there is to a tree, in general, the more oxygen it will produce. The specific species of tree is important to consider, as well as the age, size and health of the tree. A healthy 4 year old apple tree will produce more oxygen per day of summer sun than a dozen 4 year old trimmed 'bonsai' trees, simply because the 4 year old apple tree has a much greater volume of chlorophyll laden leaves (and large leaves) than the bonsai trees do. The amount of oxygen produced is dependent on the amount of chlorophyll involved in the photosynthesis process. Although there is also the consideration of how much oxygen does the tree consume as well. (Plants do both, consuming oxygen and producing carbon dioxide, and consuming carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. I presume you are asking about the NET oxygen production of the tree (which is the oxygen it produces minus the oxygen it uses. In order to know this, however, we would have to account for how much of the time it is receiving enough sunlight to achieve photosynthesis and how much oxygen it is producing during that time, less the amount of oxygen it is using during the entire day (and night) At night trees and other plants produce very little if any oxygen, but they continue cellular respiration (use of oxygen) at a lower rate.
Macadamia trees usually start producing commercial quantities of nuts between 7 to 10 years of age. However, the exact timing can vary depending on factors such as the growing conditions and specific cultivar of the tree.
That is an impossible question to answer, as it depends on the health of the tree, its age, its photosynthetic rate, and its respiration rate. In addition to this, the value of trees is not to produce oxygen, it is to sequester carbon dioxide. Algae are better oxygen producers than trees. In general, maturing trees are the best at sequestering carbon dioxide. Trees that are in their natural environment and thus live for several hundred years are excellent as well.
Yes, Oxygen dose.
to allow the correct amount of oxygen to enter and leave the substance
because after a certain age, some of the cell/tissue stop producing or replicating. every cell that replicates can only replicate a certain number of time - the number is coded in once DNA.
age
in 60 age you can stop being a monk
tissues are made out of paper which is made from trees. which age
neolithic age