transpire
Root hairs increase the surface area of the roots, allowing for more water absorption from the soil. This water is then transported upward through the plant and eventually transpired through the stomata in the leaves. Root hairs play a crucial role in maintaining the water balance of the plant by facilitating the uptake of water from the soil for transpiration to occur.
The plants stayed alive and healthy because of the process of transpiration that allowed the water to nourish them from the roots to the leaves
The plants stayed alive and healthy because of the process of transpiration that allowed the water to nourish them from the roots to the leaves.
A water molecule enters a plant root through specialized cells called root hairs and moves up through the xylem tissue, driven by capillary action and transpiration pull. It then flows through the stem and into the leaf where it exits the plant through tiny pores called stomata as water vapor, a process known as transpiration.
Evaporation of water through the plant's leaves is called transpiration.
The root word of transpiration is "transpire," which comes from the Latin word "transpirare" meaning "to breathe through" or "to evaporate."
Transpiration is the process by which plants lose water vapor through their leaves, driven by evaporation and plant temperature. Root pressure, on the other hand, is the force that helps push water and minerals from the roots to the rest of the plant, primarily as a result of active transport and osmosis. Transpiration mainly occurs in the leaves, while root pressure primarily affects the movement of water within the plant's vascular system.
Water enters the root xylem continuously mainly due to two processes: root pressure and transpiration. Root pressure is generated when minerals are actively absorbed by root cells, creating a concentration gradient that draws in water through osmosis. Additionally, the process of transpiration, where water evaporates from the leaves, creates a negative pressure that pulls water upward through the xylem from the roots. This combination of root pressure and transpiration ensures a continuous flow of water from the soil into the plant's vascular system.
yes
Transpiration is the process by which plants give out water through the stomata.
Fugitive has no root word it is the root word.
There is no root word of river. It itself is a root word.
Evaporation off of plants
the root word is'confirminglyishness'
because transpiration stream is created after every water is lost
Root word is usual.
the root word is decor and that is the root word of decorate