If you mean salt water as in an experiment, you have to remember that salt will dehydrate the plant by the process of osmosis. A formerly healthy plant, when given the salt water, will begin to wilt, have yellowing of the leaves and any further growth will be stunted.
If you mean growing sunflowers at a beach property, I can tell it to you straight. It can't be done unless you really, really protect the plant (greenhouse environment with filtered water and soil brought in from elsewhere). Like most annuals, sunflowers do not tolerate salt spray.
Yes it does. Edless I think it does.I am doing an experiment on it and I am not so sure yet but I would say yes!
yes.
yes
it grows faster
That do you think it makes it grow
Salt water provides physiological stress to the plant
The plannt will grow a small amount but it doesnt effect it in a way that there will be large amounts of growth from the plant. Although it may depend on what the type of flavoured water is.
it is to high for the plant to tolerate
An example of a non-growth plant movement includes the tendency of a plant to bend in the direction of light.
yes, water is important for plant growth. It provides nutrients for the plant, but too much water causes turgor pressure and that means that the plant's cells swell up. This is why too much water can kill a plant. Not enough water causes the plant's cells to shrink which can also cause death.
NO,The water are acidic in pH which effect the plant growth rate.
If a plant's soil has too much water, the roots can rot, and the plant can't get enough oxygen from the soil. If there is not enough water for a plant, the nutrients it needs cannot travel through the plant.
If a plant's soil has too much water, the roots can rot, and the plant can't get enough oxygen from the soil. If there is not enough water for a plant, the nutrients it needs cannot travel through the plant.