Lack of nutrition or oxygen.
Salt draws water from plant cells. This causes the cells to dehydrate and the plant to shrivel up and die.
dehydration
If chloroplasts stopped functioning in a plant cell, the cell would not be able to perform photosynthesis. This would result in a lack of production of glucose, which is essential for the plant's energy needs. Ultimately, the plant cell would not be able to survive and would eventually die.
When a cell's mass becomes too much for the plant to handle, the plant will begin to wither and die. If the cell mass is too small, the plant may lose all of its water and die.
Depends on the environment.
ussually the plant cell has a cell wall so it is more of a box-like shape. and the plant cell has a large vacuole which causes the nucleus to be on the side. in a plant cell there are small vaculoes so the nucleus is ussually in the middle and the plant cell has no cell wall just a mambrane therefore it is more sphereical.
No, because the plant cell contains a cell wall which causes the plant cell not to burst. But, it will gain water until it cannot take anymore and the pressure will prevent more water from entering.
Its causes the plant to die.
crenation
The force that causes water to rush into a plant cell is called osmotic pressure. This occurs when water moves across the cell membrane from an area of lower solute concentration to an area of higher solute concentration, effectively increasing the cell's turgor pressure. This pressure helps maintain cell rigidity and overall plant structure.
When plant cells are exposed to salt water, they undergo plasmolysis due to the higher concentration of salt outside the cell. This causes water to move out of the cell, leading to the cell membrane pulling away from the cell wall. This can result in wilting and potential damage to the plant cells.
In a plant it would die