The pressure inside a cell that is placed in a hypertonic solution will decrease causing the cell to shrivel due to water loss
"hypertonic"
Water moves out of the cell in hypertonic solution.
When placed in a hypertonic solution, an amoeba will lose water to the surrounding environment through osmosis. This loss of water causes the cell to shrink and may eventually lead to dehydration and cell death if the solution is highly concentrated.
When a cell is placed in a hypertonic solution, water will move out of the cell, causing it to shrink or shrivel up. This is because the concentration of solutes outside the cell is higher than inside, creating an osmotic gradient that leads to water loss from the cell.
The pressure inside a cell that is placed in a hypertonic solution will decrease causing the cell to shrivel due to water loss
"hypertonic"
Hypertonic
Water moves out of the cell in hypertonic solution.
hypertonic solution!
When placed in a hypertonic solution, an amoeba will lose water to the surrounding environment through osmosis. This loss of water causes the cell to shrink and may eventually lead to dehydration and cell death if the solution is highly concentrated.
yes...when placed in a hypertonic solution, it goes shrinks (plasmolysis).
The plant with flexible cell walls when placed in a hypertonic solution tends to grow larger in size by uptaking the solution by the principle of osmosis where molecules from higher concentration moves to a region of lower concentration and this happens in the cell through small minute pores present in the cell walls.
Try it yourself !
When a cell is placed in a hypertonic solution, water will move out of the cell, causing it to shrink or shrivel up. This is because the concentration of solutes outside the cell is higher than inside, creating an osmotic gradient that leads to water loss from the cell.
No, a hypertonic solution is one with a higher solute concentration compared to another solution. When a cell is placed in a hypertonic solution, water will leave the cell, causing it to shrink or crenate.
The solution must be hypertonic compared to the interior of the cell, meaning that it has a higher concentration of solutes. This causes water to leave the cell by osmosis, leading to shrinkage.