root hairs
roots/root hairs.
Water enters a plant through the roots. The roots absorb water from the soil through root hairs and transport it up through the stem to the rest of the plant.
Plant leaves have tiny spores called stomata through which air enters and water exits the plant.Stomata is plural (stoma is singular)
roots
Water enters a plant cell primarily through osmosis, a process where water molecules move across the selectively permeable cell membrane. This occurs through specialized proteins called aquaporins, which facilitate the rapid transport of water. As water enters the cell, it helps maintain turgor pressure, essential for the plant's structure and growth.
As much as the plant needs. The excess water is thrown out.
because Fresh water enters easly in the plant cells by endo osmosis. Thus, it causes better growth to the plant.
A water molecule enters a plant root through specialized cells called root hairs and moves up through the xylem tissue, driven by capillary action and transpiration pull. It then flows through the stem and into the leaf where it exits the plant through tiny pores called stomata as water vapor, a process known as transpiration.
Water enters and leaves a plant cell through the process of osmosis. When the concentration of water inside the cell is higher than outside, water will move into the cell, and when the concentration is higher outside, water will leave the cell.
CO2 enters the chloroplast through small pores called stomata on the leaves. Water is absorbed by the roots, transported through the plant's vascular system, and reaches the chloroplasts through specialized structures called xylem vessels.
It enters the most through the fibrous roots
Plants store water in their structures primarily in their vacuoles, which are specialized compartments within plant cells. These vacuoles help regulate the water content of the plant and maintain its overall structure and function.