carbon dioxide
All trees, leaves and growing vegetation absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Plants absorb carbon dioxide in their process to produce sugar and oxygen.
All trees, leaves and growing vegetation absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Carbon dioxide gas enter the stomata of leaves and from this, water, photons of light and a few trace minerals plants make their own food.
Nitrogen is needed for all life forms, including plants. Plants absorb nitrogen from soil through their roots in the form of nitrate and ammonia.
Photosynthesis Apex =]
All trees, leaves and growing vegetation absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Plant does not absorb carbon monoxide. It is a gas which does not required in photosynthesis or respiration. (Biology: Light reaction and dark reaction)
Plants absorb carbon dioxide in their process to produce sugar and oxygen.
Well carbon is the gas that plants absorb in order to release oxygen
All trees, leaves and growing vegetation absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Plants absorb carbon dioxide during photosynthesis.
The plants release oxygen which is nessesary for our life on earth and they also absorb CO2 which is a green house gas and it is also a gas we don't need to stay alive.
Plants absorb water and carbon dioxide. These two green house gases are the most common. Plants absorb only a small portion of the total green house gas. The oceans do the bulk of this work. Plants do store carbon and our a major carbon sink for the planet.
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.
plants absorb amonnia or nitrate
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.