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In terrestrial plants, gas enters and leaves (termed "gas exchange") through cell-lined pores called "stomata." Stomata open and close in response to light and humidity, permitting oxygen, carbon dioxide and water vapor to enter and leave the plant. In most terrestrial plants, the stomata are located on the surface of the leaves, or in cacti, on the surface of the stems. In aquatic plants, gas exchange directly though the tissue surface.
These are plants without leaves
Leave per se do not photosynthesize but the organelles within the cells of the leaves (the chloroplasts) do.
Leaves
Leaves are adapted to their function in several ways: Because leaves photosynthesis it needs water and carbon dioxide to complete the rection. They have board leaves giving them a big surface area for light to fall on They contain chlorophyll in the chloroplast to absord the sunlight They have air spaces that allow carbon dioxide to get to the cells, and oxygen to leave them be diffusion They have veins, which bring plenty of water to the cells of the leaves (these are called xylem) Hoped this helped :)
In terrestrial plants, gas enters and leaves (termed "gas exchange") through cell-lined pores called "stomata." Stomata open and close in response to light and humidity, permitting oxygen, carbon dioxide and water vapor to enter and leave the plant. In most terrestrial plants, the stomata are located on the surface of the leaves, or in cacti, on the surface of the stems. In aquatic plants, gas exchange directly though the tissue surface.
The present tense of the word "leave" is "leaves."
leave = waraqa leaves = awraaq
The leave are on the fruit
Why is everybody so dumb on this just look just use Google
They leave when the circus leaves.
They leave when the circus leaves.
When used as a noun (e.g. "going on leave") the plural of leave remains leave. However, leaves is the plural for leaf.
the leaves dodo
Leaves of absence.
no, leave have veins in them, but they do not have leaves on/in them.
I/you/we/they leave. He/she/it leaves. The present participle is leaving.