When a plant loses too much water the stomata close and oxygen and other substances cannot enter or leave the plant. The cells themselves will become plasmolyzed, whereby the cell membrane pulls away from the cell wall.
it will die as it absorb to much water until they are full
Its root system will become weak and if the plnt remain submerged for a longer period it will die.
In terrestrial plants too much water will weaken the root zone
drerfew
Become really concentrated
The plant will die as water can't go through the plant
It dies because it cannot breath over so much water.
Root hairs branch out all over the roots. By doing this, they vastly increase the surface area of the root system. Roots can only absorb water from the soil if it's touching that moist soil. By increasing the surface area of the root system, we're making more of the root system touch more moist soil, allowing the plant to absorb more water and nutrients.
Too much water, life evolves in the sea, too much sun, life ceases to exist Burnt to a crisp
If a plant got to much water, it would end up getting all soggy and dying!
it dies
The plant would look much greener, and would undergo photosynthesis more.
There would be floods
It would dehydrate because it would transpire too much.
It will die. And for some plants, too much water can have the same result. Ask your local nurseryman.
no it would not die
How much water do you need to put in a house plant
you water it as much as it needs you water it so that the plants soil is moist all most all the time so that is does not die
Become really concentrated
No, because if the plant gets to much water it stops growing.
How much water do you need to put in a house plant