unknown
Roots
No, they are not. Roots are used by the plants, which are producers, to take up nutrients and water in the soil.
Phosphates were once common in laundry detergents and are a macronutrient for plants. More modern laundry detergents are not good sources for phosphates.
There are many things a plants roots do for an ecosystem. Plants roots help prevent erosion of soil for example.
Turnip.
Plants Will Die From The Detergents By The Detergents Suffocating The Plants Then Leaving The Plants To Die.
Water used in photosynthesis by plants is made available by roots. That is why roots of plants are important to photosynthesis in terrestrial plants. Aqatic plants absorb water from their free surface, hence role of roots in these plants is limited.
Detergents that contain phosphates can, in the right quantities, promote the growth of plants such as algae.
yes
The chemicals in detergent are poison like. You pour them in the soil and the roots absorb it. The plant mistakes it as water and nutrients. Then chemicals spread through it eventually killing it.
it is useful because fertilizers are to grow plants and detergents is to clean your clothes
Roots
roots
Detergents have poison in them that kills the plant. When you pore that poisen in it it automatically kills the plant. That's how detergents kill the plant.
No, they are not. Roots are used by the plants, which are producers, to take up nutrients and water in the soil.
Phosphates were once common in laundry detergents and are a macronutrient for plants. More modern laundry detergents are not good sources for phosphates.
The roots are used for anchorage The roots are used for absorption of water and mineral salads