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Carbon dioxide and oxygen enter and leave the plant through the stomata, on the underside of leaves.
guard cells and stomata.
Green plant life. Carbon dioxide in absorbed by green plant leaf. It undergoes photosynthesis in the plant; the oxygen is released back into the atmosphere and the carbon is retained in the plant as biomass. It is part of the Carbon / Oxygen cycle.
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The leaves of a plant (or more correctly the chlorophyll in the chloroplasts of a leaf) use carbon dioxide and water to make glucose and oxygen.6 CO2 + 6 H2O ARROW C6H12O6 + 6 O26 carbon dioxide molecules plus 6 water molecules make one molecule of glucose and 6 molecules of oxygen.
A stoma is used to control gas exchange -- oxygen and carbon dioxide.
A stomata, which allows for the exchange of oxygen to exit and carbon dioxide to enter.
Guard cells allows the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide in and out of the leaf. This is known as leaf exchange. When guard cells are full of water they swell up and close meaning no oxygen can leave or carbon dioxide can enter, but when the water is taken away from the cell they open up to allow oxygen to exit and carbon dioxide to enter.
The exchange of oxygen occurs in the spongy layer. When light hits the spongy layet it will open which releases the oxygen and lets carbon dioxide in.
It consumes carbon dioxide and lets off oxygen.
All plants inhale carbon dioxide and exhale oxygen.
leaves have pores on there underside that allow carbon dioxide in and let oxygen out
the surface of these cells are moist and the stomatas are open
None. Leaves "breathe" in Carbon Dioxide, and put out Oxygen.
photosynthesis
Carbon dioxide and oxygen enter and leave the plant through the stomata, on the underside of leaves.
carbon dioxide im doing a project now