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Q: Extra sugar molecules pass out of the plant through the stomata during photosynthesis?
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What is the job of the stomata in photosynthesis?

Stomata open to let the leaves take in CO2 during process of photosynthesis, and allow oxygen to escape. They also allow water to escape, thus aiding sap transport. Some desert plants close their stomata during the heat of the day, and only open them at night. The CO2 they absorb during the night, they then store up, and allow photosynthesis to take place during the daylight. This is called C4 photosynthesis.


What happens to molecules during photosynthesis?

It gets released into the Atmosphere.


How do plants remove their waste through their leaves?

Plants can get rid of excess water by transpiration from their leaves. Carbon dioxide in plants is released during respiration gets utilized during photosynthesis. Oxygenexits through stomata, root cell walls, and other routes.


Why does the stomata open?

To keep in the stored enzymes so it can keep synthesizing at night, even when there is no sunlight. -- Stomata serve two main functions - they allow carbon dioxide to reach the cells in the leaf where the majority of photosynthesis takes place and they allow water to be transpired out off the leaf. During the day, stomata are generally open to allow photosynthesis to take place as quickly as possible. At night, when the lack of light means photosynthesis can't take place, many plants close their stomata to reduce water loss. There is one group of mainly desert plants, known as CAM plants, that keep their stomata closed during the day when water loss would be greatest, and open them at night, using a biochemical method to effectively store carbon dioxide in the leaf overnight.


When are plants most likely to give off greater amounts of oxygen?

During the day when photosynthesis is taking place and the stomata are open.

Related questions

What gas does a plant release through its stomata during photosynthesis?

oxygen


How do the molecules progress through photosynthesis?

molocules are predouces when mking food during photosynthesis


Where does CO2 enter on a leaf during photosynthesis?

CO2 enters through stomata. They are tiny pores on leaves.


Why does water diffuse out through the stomata?

the gas exchange through stomata because it gives more gas to the plants and to the people that breathe in (NOW SATISFIED)


How do plants obtain oxygen they need?

thru their leaves. Edited answer: Partly from the process of photosynthesis during day time and partly from the air through the stomata during gaseous exchange.


What is the function of stomata in the leaf during photosynthesis?

The stomata let carbon dioxide diffuse in the plant since it's needed for photosynthesis. If it's not opened during daylight as a result of excessive water loss from the leaf, their closure will restrict photosynthesis by preventing the inward diffusion of atmospheric CO2.


How do substances for photosynthesis enter and leave the plant?

The gas for photosynthesis...carbon dioxide diffuses into the plant through its stomata ('holes' in the leaf's underside). Water is transported through the plant in the xylem tube (waterproof tube that makes up part of the plants veins and covers the whole plants structure) as it is drawn up from the roots where it is absorbed. It is drawn up by the water evaporationg through the stomata. The light obviously enters the leaf and enters the chloroplasts where it combines with the chlorophyll to provide the energy for the photosynthesis reaction. The products from photosynthesis...glucose and oxygen are removed from the plant leaves. Glucose through the phloem tube (another of the veins) and oxygen through diffusion through the stomata or it is used up in respiration.


How does sugar and carbon dioxide get into the leaves during photosynthesis?

carbon di oxide gets in through the stomata,which is later converted into organic compound specially sugars.


How does CO2 get into a leaf?

Through the stomata, openings in the leaf surface. By diffusion. There are three photosynthesis processes, C3, C4, and CAM. (These names describe part of the chemistry.) The desert plants (and some epiphytes) use CAM, for in this process, the stomata are closed during the day, and open at night. The plant absorbs CO2 into its system as a complex chemical (the CAM bit) over night, and during the day, the stomata close and the plant converts the CAM chemical into CO2 to be used for photosynthesis in the usual way. Normal plants open their stomata during the day, and CO2 diffuses in and O2 out.


What is the job of the stomata in photosynthesis?

Stomata open to let the leaves take in CO2 during process of photosynthesis, and allow oxygen to escape. They also allow water to escape, thus aiding sap transport. Some desert plants close their stomata during the heat of the day, and only open them at night. The CO2 they absorb during the night, they then store up, and allow photosynthesis to take place during the daylight. This is called C4 photosynthesis.


What is the process in which sugar is formed in photosynthesis are broken into simpler molecules?

During cellular respiration the sugars formed during photosynthesis are broken into simpler molecules. These simpler molecules are carbon dioxide and water.


What reactant is oxidized during photosynthesis?

Water (H20) is split into 6O2, 24H+, and 24e-.