Plants take in Carbon Dioxide and give out Oxygen.
Respiration via glycolysis
Respiration occurs in all living cells - days and nights (any time). Animals respire (breathe) taking in oxygen and exhaling carbon dioxide all the time. Plants - green plants - tend to take in carbon dioxide and give off oxygen during daylight hours, but reverse the process overnight.
Plants like pothos, snake plant, and spider plant are known for their ability to perform photosynthesis and release oxygen continuously, even at night. These plants are great choices for improving indoor air quality and adding oxygen to your home environment.
Plants take in food from their roots, all plants do.
Green plants take in carbon dioxide during photosynthesis and give out oxygen. While respiration, all living organisms take in oxygen and carbon dioxide and then give out carbon dioxide.
Yes and it is happening all the time now.
If you have a friend who can give you an invitation then it will take no time at all. If you are waiting on a Spotify list it can take some time and will vary depending on which country you are in.
The type of plants that give food would include almost all plants. Many plants give us fruits and vegetables while other plants feed animals that are eaten as well.
they breath all the time like us, beacuse if they did not breath through the night they would die.................................................................................. this is wat i am saying i dont no if it is true
Some plants do, Such as Carrot plant, Tomato Plants, Potatoes, they are all plants.
Plants use carbon dioxide in the daytime as part of photosynthesis which occurs in the chloroplast. They use the CO2 and make sugars. People breath in oxygen and breath out carbon dioxide, plants do the opposite. They breath in carbon dioxide and breath out oxygen.One small "technical" detail that should be mentioned. Plants really don't breath, they respire. People breath.So, at the night, the plant cells respire more than they photosynthesise, so they get rid of more carbon dioxide than oxygen.
Plants release water vapor through a process called transpiration. This is when water evaporates from the leaves and stems into the air, helping to regulate the plant's temperature and transport nutrients.