it dies....
The detergent does affect plant growth because the detergent has too much chemicals that are very poisonous to the plant!->Tatiana
Nothing it just stays dead. HeHe
yes you can such as you can make a plant watering thing out of laundry detergent
it grows Edited answer: If the plant has reached the stage of permanent wilting it will not respond, in case of temporary wilting the plant will recover on watering.
the plant cannot carry on photosynthesis and allot of carbon dioxide
it just makes the plant grow a little slower then if it was watered by water
If the wilted plant is watered, the water always moves from a high amount of water to a lower amount. In this case, there is more water outside the plant than inside the plant. Water moves by diffusion but in this case we use a special term called osmosis. The plant will 'perk up'.
Nothing will happen, as plants depend on soil water which is retained there for several days.
There are several things that happen to a wilted plant when it is watered. The water will rehydrate the cells in the plants which are usually made up of water and this will revitalize the plant.
agavde
No, it's an action.
One reason that laundry detergent has gotten so expensive is because the phosphorus and other chemicals that were being used are now being regulated. In other words, when the water goes to the water treatment plant, they are having to either buy multi-million dollar neutralization systems or regulate what goes into the detergents in the first place, so the manufacturers have to find other substitutions which can potentially cost more.