The fox makes it, the plant breaks it apart.
carbon dioide does not leave the leaf but oygen does
Trees will take in carbon dioxide (CO2) from the air, this is then used with oxygen, water and glucose (sugar) for photosynthesis.
All trees give oxygen; it is a result of the trees "inhaling" carbon dioxide. Just like how humans give off carbon dioxide when they exhale, trees also give off carbon dioxide. So all trees give off oxygen to the environment-its a natural result of trees trying to survive.
No.Plants do not need carbon dioxide.But some plants use carbon dioxide during night and produce oxygen during day. Neem tree does not use carbon dioxide at all!!. They produce oxygen during the day as well as during the night.
Trees "breathe" CO2 (carbon dioxide) through extremely small openings between the plants cells on the bottom of the leaf, called stomata (stoma singular). Through the same stomata O2 leaves the leaf.
The fox makes it, the plant breaks it apart.
Carbon Dioxide is created when a plant (ex. tree) takes in air
More carbon dioxide is being produced primarily due to human activities such as burning fossil fuels, deforestation, and industrial processes. These activities release large amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, contributing to the greenhouse effect and global warming.
A tree absorbs carbon dioxide from the air, and, with the input of energy from sunlight, oxidizes many of the oxygen atoms of the absorbed carbon dioxide to elemental oxygen, which is released into the atmosphere. The carbon and some of the oxygen atoms from the absorbed carbon dioxide are incorporated into the structure of the tree as the tree grows.
The only carbon dioxide released by simply cutting the tree is that which is produced by the energy required to cut the tree: the human breathing out carbon dioxide as he swings an axe or uses a saw, the carbon dioxide emitted by a chainsaw's combustion engine, or the carbon dioxide emitted by logging machinery while cutting the tree. Significantly more carbon is emitted afterward as the lumber is transported from the site and as the tree is cut up into smaller pieces, then the smaller pieces are shipped all over. Finally, as the wood biodegrades (or burns), some carbon dioxide will be released.
The alveoli are at the end of the respiratory tree and is where oxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged between the lungs and the blood.
Carbon dioxide. Simple as that.
carbon dioxide
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a tree needs carbon dioxide, sunlight, water and soil to survive
About half the body weight of a tree is carbon. The tree absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, stores the carbon, and releases the oxygen. As the tree grows, it stores more and more carbon.
About half the body weight of a tree is carbon. The tree absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, stores the carbon, and releases the oxygen. As the tree grows, it stores more and more carbon.