don't know all the products, but carbon dioxide goes in and out of stomata. :)
StomataThe holes in leaves surrounded by guard cells are called stomata. These stomata help regulate the water that goes into and out of the plant.
Most of the air goes to your lungs and some goes to your stomach. Both of them come out of the stomata only. Some air from your stomach is absorbed in your intestine. The remaining pass through lower end of digestive tract.
Gases enter and exit a leaf through stomata. These are openings in the epidermis which are regulated by guard cells. Guard cells decide which gases can go in and out. The gas that goes in is carbon dioxide and the gas that goes out it oxygen.
stomata =Specialized passages through the cuticle that enable plants to exchange gases.
The product of the process called photosynthesis is Oxygen, and it goes out the vegetable cell through the stomata, which are minuscule openings of the cell that also have the job of letting the CO2 get inside to start the photosynthetic process.
Stomata
Stomata is already the plural form of stoma.
When the stomata open, it allows for gas exchange to occur in plants. Carbon dioxide enters the leaf for photosynthesis while oxygen and water vapor are released. This process helps with photosynthesis and transpiration.
probably means it is shut. since carbon dioxide goes through the stomata and is necessary for photosynthesis then if there is a low amount of it in the leaf then the stomata must be shut
No , stomata are not present in mushroom as they are fungi . Stomata are present in plants for gaseous exchange .
generally xerophytic plants have sunken stomata
draw a stomata