stomata
stomata
stomata
carbon dioxide is taken through the leaves, and oxygen goes out. !
Stomata. They are small pores on the surface of leaves that allow for gas exchange, including the intake of carbon dioxide for photosynthesis and the release of oxygen.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the gas required for photosynthesis. It is taken in by plants through small openings on their leaves called stomata and used along with water and sunlight to produce glucose and oxygen.
Human beings breath in oxygen, and breath out CO2. The plant's leaves, when making photosynthesis, use CO2 and a few other things to make photosynthesis. When finished with making photosynthesis, the leaves release some oxygen, which is the gas we use to breathe. Thus, oxygen is the useful gas made by photosynthesis.
oxygen enters and glucose is released... follow on instagram @nailsbyisis
The process that allows oxygen and carbon dioxide to transfer is called respiration. In the lungs, oxygen is taken in from the air we breathe and is exchanged for carbon dioxide that is then exhaled. This gas exchange occurs in the alveoli, tiny air sacs in the lungs, where oxygen enters the bloodstream and carbon dioxide leaves it.
It is carbon dioxide which is collected from different organs of the body by blood
carbon dioxide
oxygen/ carbon dioxide oxygen/ carbon dioxide
Plants use carbon dioxide (CO2) during photosynthesis to produce glucose and oxygen. Carbon dioxide is taken in through tiny pores in the leaves called stomata and is converted into sugars by the process of photosynthesis.