yes, salt is a part of mineral's, from soil.
It doesn't come from a plant. Search "Is salt a plant?" to find out where salt comes from.
mesophytes and dicots
salt
the salt draws water from the plants causing eventual death of the plant.
Watering a plant with salt water can have harmful effects on the plant. The high salt content in the water can disrupt the plant's ability to take up essential nutrients and water through its roots. This can lead to dehydration, nutrient deficiencies, and eventually plant death.
No. The salt content in urine will kill the plant.
Some seeds (mangrove and coconut) can. But in most cases the presence of salt causes moisture in a plant to come out of the plant (by osmosis) and this means that the seed/plant can not grow in a salty environment unless it has special adaptations for dealing with salt.
you get some salt. and put it on a plant
Depends what plant, Salt would be neutral or harmful to you plant. No pros of putting salt on your plant.
a plant can't take much salt There is no definite answer. Just don't take the salt shaker to your plant.
Sodium chloride is not extracted from plants.
Salt is not better than sugar for a plant. In almost every case, salt will eventually kill a plant while sugar is sometimes used in plant food.
Salt water provides physiological stress to the plant
when salt is scattered on the soil of a potted plant why does it die
If the plant is not a salt water plant, then plasmolysis will occur when you pour salt on a plant.When you pour salt on a plant water molecules inside the cell are drawn out. When the water molecules leave the cell, the cell becomes dehydrates and shrinks. This is called plasmolysis.
salt water and coffee
Yes. It actually shortens the plant life. The water in the plant will diffuse into the salt water. This means that the water that the plant cells use is drained down into the salt water because the salt can not pass through the plant which leaves the plant to die faster
no
Yes, and salt water is also alive.