Plants breath through the stomata, which are tiny openings on the leaves. They breath the opposite of how humans breathe.
CO2
A child breathing out would provide CO2, which is used by the plant in photosynthesis.
A gas-exchange pore on a plant is called a stoma (plural: Stomata).
There are a few functions that are performed during respiration in a plant but not in a human. One of these functions is breathing out oxygen.
they store it in the plant cells to use later.
Anaerobic respiration is the act of breathing without the use of oxygen. Breathing where oxygen is not the final result.
A child breathing out would provide CO2, which is used by the plant in photosynthesis.
A child breathing out would provide CO2, which is used by the plant in photosynthesis.
photolysis
You use your nose for smelling along with breathing. You also use your mouth for breathing but you only use your nose for smelling
When you talk to a plant, you breathe out carbon dioxide, and plants use this to perform photosynthesis, so they can make food. So basically the good thing is not talking to it, but breathing on it.
no plants
A gas-exchange pore on a plant is called a stoma (plural: Stomata).
Breathing is breathing is breathing whatever you use to do it with. There is no special term or word to my knowledge that specifically means "Breathing with gills".
No. Plants have tiny holes in the bottom of their leaves that take in oxygen. Also, plants don't have lungs.
fishes do not use their lungs for breathing
No, the part that gets you high are the trichromes.
leaves carry on photosynthesis.moisture forms as a leaf breathes.