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The movement of water molecules from its region of higher concentration to lower concentration of its region is called osmosis. Transpiration is the loss of water in the form of water vapour from the aerial parts of a plant.
Osmosis involves the movement of water across a semi-permeable membrane, so in plants, if there is more water outside the cell than inside, water can move out of the cell causing it to wilt. Transpiration is the process where plants lose water through their leaves to the atmosphere, so if transpiration rate is high due to environmental conditions like heat and wind, the plant can wilt faster. Overall, both osmosis and transpiration contribute to the loss of water in plant cells which can lead to wilting if not enough water is taken up from the soil to compensate.
Osmosis is always the movement of only water that move from a high concentration of water to a lower concentration. It is passive and requires no energy. Plants breathe through their stomata, little openings that allow transpiration, which is the outward passage of water vapor along with carbon dioxide.
Transpiration is water loss from plants.
Water leaves a plant through a process called transpiration. It occurs when water is absorbed by the plant's roots, moves up through the stem, and eventually evaporates through small pores on the leaves called stomata. This loss of water helps create a suction force that pulls up more water from the roots to replace what is lost.
Transpiration.
The movement of water molecules from its region of higher concentration to lower concentration of its region is called osmosis. Transpiration is the loss of water in the form of water vapour from the aerial parts of a plant.
osmosis or The Water Cycle: Transpiration- evaporation from the leaves of plants
Osmosis involves the movement of water across a semi-permeable membrane, so in plants, if there is more water outside the cell than inside, water can move out of the cell causing it to wilt. Transpiration is the process where plants lose water through their leaves to the atmosphere, so if transpiration rate is high due to environmental conditions like heat and wind, the plant can wilt faster. Overall, both osmosis and transpiration contribute to the loss of water in plant cells which can lead to wilting if not enough water is taken up from the soil to compensate.
Osmosis is always the movement of only water that move from a high concentration of water to a lower concentration. It is passive and requires no energy. Plants breathe through their stomata, little openings that allow transpiration, which is the outward passage of water vapor along with carbon dioxide.
Water can enter the atmosphere by evaporating from the leaves of plants in a process called transpiration. This is part of the water cycle where water is absorbed by plants through their roots, travels up the stem to the leaves, and then evaporates into the air.
Transpiration is water loss from plants.
diffusion and osmosis are types of ways to get materials into or out of a cell
of diffusion (of water)
Osmosis only works BECAUSE OF diffusion.
osmosis
osmosis