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A plant cell will wilt due to lack of turgor pressure in it.
Yes, in an isotonic solution the plant loses Turgour Pressure and the cell wall becomes less rigid and the plant will wilt.
The word ladder answer is Dilt
The plant will begin to wilt as the cell loses structural integrity.
The vacuoles are larger in plants and not so large in mammals. They tend to try to retain more fluid for survival and when that amount is depleted, it is far more noticeable and they appear wilted until they can rejuvenate through rain, ground water et cetera.
The hypertonic solution can make the plant weak or wilt because there is no water.
A plant cell will wilt due to lack of turgor pressure in it.
it can make it wilt because there is no water in the cell which is hypertonic solutions.
dehydration
Yes, in an isotonic solution the plant loses Turgour Pressure and the cell wall becomes less rigid and the plant will wilt.
The pressure exerted by water inside the cell wall will help keep the cell wall rigid. If the plant loses water, this pressure decreases and the plant will wilt.
Cell sap
A plant cell has a larger vacuole than animal cell. The plant cell needs to store more water for photosyheteis and to keep the rigidy of the cell wall. That's why plants wilt when they don't get enough water.
The word ladder answer is Dilt
when plants don't have water, they wilt
The plant will begin to wilt as the cell loses structural integrity.
The cell wall and the vacuole. When not supplied enough water, the vacuole will shrivel up, causing a plant to wilt.