Osmosis is the movement of water molecules across a plasma membrane from a region of low solute concentration to a region of high solute concentration.
Plasmolysis is one of the results of osmosis. In other words, osmosis causes plasmolysis to occur. In plasmolysis, cell losses water through osmosis to the surroundings solution.
The conditions that will allow playmolysis are :
(a) the cell is more hypotonic
(b) the surrounding solution is more hypertonic
The shrinking of cytoplasm by osmosis is called plasmolysis. This occurs when a plant cell loses water due to a hypertonic environment, causing the cell membrane to detach from the cell wall.
Plasmolysis in Rheo discolor leaf cells occurs when water moves out of the cell, causing the cell membrane to detach from the cell wall. This results in the wilted appearance of the leaf due to the loss of turgor pressure. Plasmolysis can be induced by placing the leaf in a hypertonic solution that causes water to move out of the cells.
The shrinking of a cell due to loss of water is called plasmolysis. This occurs when water leaves the cell due to a hypertonic environment outside the cell, causing the cell membrane to detach from the cell wall and the cell to shrink.
If an onion cell epidermis is placed in a hypertonic solution, water will move out of the cell due to osmosis, causing the cell to shrink and the cell membrane to pull away from the cell wall. This process is known as plasmolysis.
i think the person is foolish who have asked this question because he dont even knows the correct spelling of the word plasmolysis so i dont think that he should be given the answer of this question
plasmolysis
Due to plasmolysis
The shrinking of cytoplasm by osmosis is called plasmolysis. This occurs when a plant cell loses water due to a hypertonic environment, causing the cell membrane to detach from the cell wall.
plasmolysis
To demonstrate plasmolysis with a filament of spirogyra in the laboratory, place the filament in a hypertonic solution such as salt water. As water leaves the cell by osmosis, the cytoplasm shrinks away from the cell wall, leading to the detachment of the cytoplasm from the cell wall, demonstrating plasmolysis. This can be observed under a microscope.
The condition you are referring to is called plasmolysis. This process occurs when a plant cell loses water through osmosis, causing the cell membrane to detach from the cell wall.
Plasmolysis is the process in which a cell loses water due to osmosis and the cell membrane detaches from the cell wall, leading to the shrinkage of the cell. This can occur when a plant cell is placed in a hypertonic solution where the concentration of solutes outside the cell is higher than inside.
Osmosis is the tendency of fluid to pass through a semi-permeable membrane until there is an equal concentration of fluid on each side of the membrane. The fluid in not transported, movement is self induced
Plasmolysis in Rheo discolor leaf cells occurs when water moves out of the cell, causing the cell membrane to detach from the cell wall. This results in the wilted appearance of the leaf due to the loss of turgor pressure. Plasmolysis can be induced by placing the leaf in a hypertonic solution that causes water to move out of the cells.
The shrinking of a cell due to loss of water is called plasmolysis. This occurs when water leaves the cell due to a hypertonic environment outside the cell, causing the cell membrane to detach from the cell wall and the cell to shrink.
Plasmolysis is when a plant cell looses so much water (via osmosis) so the cell membrane begins to "peel away" from the cell wall :)
Plasmolysis is the process that occurs when plant cells lose water through osmosis, resulting in the contraction of the cell membrane away from the cell wall. This phenomenon is primarily associated with diffusion, as it involves the movement of water molecules from an area of higher concentration inside the cell to an area of lower concentration outside. Imbibition, on the other hand, refers to the absorption of water by solid particles, such as seeds, and is not directly related to plasmolysis. Thus, plasmolysis is best identified with diffusion rather than imbibition.