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Plants absorb water and nutrients from the soil though their roots.
Leaching can lose minerals in the soil through rain. Plant roots absorb the water!! Your welcome
The plant obtains water (H2O) from the soil, the water molecules then go into the root cells, through the vascular tissue in the stem, and to the leaves.
roots are adapted to absorb vitamins and minerals by absorbing water through there semi permeable membrane on the roots. this membrane (skin) allows some things to pass through it will bigger things will be stopped
Do get water, and vitamins and minerals from the soil and from the fertilizer you may use.
Maybe because when the water is in the soil and is going through the roots up the stem some soil particles can go in the water and travel with it.
Porosity--the ability of water to move through the soil Permeability--the abiity of roots to reach into the soil Where water goes, roots can follow. If water cannot penetrate the soil, roots won't either.
Plants absorb water and nutrients from the soil though their roots.
through their roots.
Primarily water passes through the stem of a vascular plant. However, minerals from the soil, which are absorbed by the plant's roots, also travel through the stem.
plants observes the water through its roots.
Water is absorbed by plants through the soil. When water is poured into the soil, the roots of the plant soak in the moisture from the soil, which allows the nutrients and vitamins to thrive.
Plants absorb water and nutrients from the soil though their roots.
From the soil, through the roots.
The rate at which water passes through any material is called percolation rate of water.
Through the roots of the grass through the ground/soil/dirt
Through their roots. They soak up water in the soil, and while they are getting their water, the nutrients in the soil get carried up into the plant itself through the water. In other words, the nutrients in the soil get mixed into the water, get soaked up into the roots of the plant, which distribute the nutrient-infested (for lack of a better word) water through the whole plant.