The brown copper(II) chloride absorb water and form the green dihydrate.
Nitrogen is needed for all life forms, including plants. Plants absorb nitrogen from soil through their roots in the form of nitrate and ammonia.
Plants absorb mineral nutrients by way of ions in the soil. This is basically the case with how all plants get their nutrients besides sunlight. The process takes place at the atomic level.
Some plants can absorb preferentially uranium from soils.
Ozone and heavy metals are harmful to plants.
does copper absorb electricty
Bacteria plants extract copper by absorbing its chemical properties. The same goes along with fungi but they absorb the copper and use that as a reproduction synthetic. Bacteria plants can also repel the copper if the chemical properties to them is not suffice or sufficient. First, bacteria will explore the copper and its chemical properties and search for the right chemical composition to support the plant. Then, once the pathogen/virus finds the right chemical composition, they absorb the chemical composition in the copper and return to the plant. Finally, they repel the composition from their bodies into the plant which makes it suffice to create glucose.
No. I'm not sure what "absorb electricity" even means, and copper doesn't absorb water to any appreciable degree.
Plants absorb carbon dioxide during photosynthesis.
plants absorb amonnia or nitrate
The plants absorb minerals from the soil, since it is wet. When the soil is dry, there is no way for plants to absorb anything. That's what rain do, by making the soil wet, so that plants can absorb minerals through their roots.
The roots of plants is what which helps the plants to absorb water and other nutrients from soil.
Very little protein is dissolved in the water that plants absorb from the soil. Plants mostly manufacture their own proteins.
Yes, copper fungicide can be used on bamboo plants.
Photosynthesis
chloroplasts
the roots