CO2 and they breath out oxygen
CO2 and they breath out oxygen
No, but the keratin that makes up your nails has microscopic pores on them that ventilate after bruising.
Plants breathe in carbon dioxide through microscopic pores called stomata, which are primarily located on the undersides of leaves. During photosynthesis, they take in this carbon dioxide and, along with sunlight and water, convert it into glucose and oxygen. The oxygen produced is released back into the atmosphere, while the glucose serves as energy for the plant's growth and development.
These pores are called the stomata.
plants get air by breathing in air through their pores which are really tiny, that's how plants can breathe.
Plants have tiny pores on the backs of their leaves. If you look closley through a microscope you can see them. That is how plants breathe / respirate
Stomata
Plants absorb Carbon Dioxide through pores in their leaves and combine it with chloropyl to produce glucose for their nutrition, giving out Oxygen as their waste gas.
microscopic pores found under a leaf.
Absolutely. Pores want to breathe. When they are clogged they will be forced to get bigger in order to breathe, if you unclog them and keep them clear they will begin to shrink over time.
when you breathe out, plants breathe in.
the pores in the filter may be too large