If a plant's soil has too much water, the roots can rot, and the plant can't get enough oxygen from the soil. If there is not enough water for a plant, the nutrients it needs cannot travel through the plant.
Salt water provides physiological stress to the plant
The effect that salt has on plants is that it doesn't stimulate the growth cycle. Controlled (pure water) on the other hand makes plants grow faster than watering it with salt water.
The plants will have a delayed growth or not grow at all. I did an experiment with this and two of the plants with ash grew at a slow rate and one didn't grow at all. The ash absorbs the water that if supposed to go into the plant's soil.
The amount of sunlight, the amount of CO2,the amount of warmth and the amount of water all effect photosynthesis.The amount of sunlight, the amount of CO2,the amount of warmth and the amount of water all effect photosynthesis.
yes it does, it kill the plant. :)
The plannt will grow a small amount but it doesnt effect it in a way that there will be large amounts of growth from the plant. Although it may depend on what the type of flavoured water is.
If a plant's soil has too much water, the roots can rot, and the plant can't get enough oxygen from the soil. If there is not enough water for a plant, the nutrients it needs cannot travel through the plant.
yes.
yes
yep. too little and it will wither, too much and the roots will rot
it grows faster
That do you think it makes it grow
Salt water provides physiological stress to the plant
Too little water will stunt a plant's growth. Too much will simply kill it. In the proper range of watering the height of a plant is determined by other factors.
When other plants need the same nutrients and water that the other plant needs they compete for the nutrients and won't get as much as they should do. When a plant doesn't get the required amount of water, it wilts
it is to high for the plant to tolerate
The amount varies depending on the plant species. Some have a higher tolerance. To help determine levels for individual plants, see the Related Link below.