yes,because it give atrificial colour to plant making it cannot make photosynthesis,it also containing pH that not good fore plant
A grass stain is made out of plant food.
no
The stain of weed is the mark or residue left behind after a plant dies and dries. It can vary in color and composition depending on the plant and the surface it is on.
One common stain used for plant tissue is safranin, which is often used to stain plant cell walls and lignified tissues red. There are other stains like toluidine blue and crystal violet that are also commonly used for plant tissue staining.
No it can't kill the zombie the zombie will kill the plant not get killed.
kill the plant
Neutral red stain is typically absorbed by the vacuoles of plant cells, which are membrane-bound organelles that store various substances such as pigments, nutrients, and waste products. The red color of the stain accumulates in the vacuoles, allowing for visualization of the vacuolar structure in plant cells.
No, epidermal cells from petunia do not stain with phloroglucinol. Phloroglucinol is typically used to stain lignin in plant tissues, not epidermal cells. The stain mainly reacts with lignin, which is absent in the epidermal cells.
I just did a lab in biology called "How Plant and Animal Cells Differ" and in the packet it had that question. The answer is: Lugol's iodine stain stops the activity of the cell. It kills whatever specimen it is staining.
Salt kills grass & weeds. Probably kill a plant too. You can stop watering a plant and it will die.
Floods damage property and kill people.
Plant cells are typically stained with dyes like iodine to highlight structures like nuclei and starch granules. Animal cells can be stained with dyes like hematoxylin and eosin to distinguish different cell components like nuclei and cytoplasm. These stains help researchers visualize and study the cells under a microscope.