plasmolysis
A hypotonic solution will draw water from red blood cells or Elodea cells. In a hypotonic solution, the concentration of solutes outside the cell is lower than inside the cell, leading to water entering the cell by osmosis to equalize the concentration. This causes the cells to swell and potentially burst.
The hypothesis of an osmosis lab with an Elodea leaf could be that the Elodea leaf will lose water and shrink when placed in a hypertonic solution due to water moving out of the leaf cells by osmosis, causing the cells to become flaccid. Conversely, if the Elodea leaf is placed in a hypotonic solution, it may gain water, swell, and become turgid as water moves into the leaf cells via osmosis.
Elodea lives in pond water, which is a hypotonicenvironment - hypotonic has less dissolved solutes than the elodea cells.yes the answer would be hypotonic.
If the vacuoles in Elodea leaf cells are placed in distilled water, they become hypotonic. Distilled water has a lower solute concentration compared to the vacuoles of the cells, causing water to move into the cells through osmosis, leading to swelling and eventual bursting of the cells.
Oh, dude, when you stick elodea cells in a salt solution, they're like, "Whoa, this is salty!" The salt solution messes with their osmotic balance, so water leaves the cells, making them shrink and look all sad. It's like when you eat too many chips and your fingers swell up – not a good time for anyone involved.
A hypotonic solution will draw water from red blood cells or Elodea cells. In a hypotonic solution, the concentration of solutes outside the cell is lower than inside the cell, leading to water entering the cell by osmosis to equalize the concentration. This causes the cells to swell and potentially burst.
The hypothesis of an osmosis lab with an Elodea leaf could be that the Elodea leaf will lose water and shrink when placed in a hypertonic solution due to water moving out of the leaf cells by osmosis, causing the cells to become flaccid. Conversely, if the Elodea leaf is placed in a hypotonic solution, it may gain water, swell, and become turgid as water moves into the leaf cells via osmosis.
Elodea lives in pond water, which is a hypotonicenvironment - hypotonic has less dissolved solutes than the elodea cells.yes the answer would be hypotonic.
Hydrocharitaceae is the name. yes im not lying calm down.
If the vacuoles in Elodea leaf cells are placed in distilled water, they become hypotonic. Distilled water has a lower solute concentration compared to the vacuoles of the cells, causing water to move into the cells through osmosis, leading to swelling and eventual bursting of the cells.
When an Elodea leaf is added to a phenol red solution, the leaf will release oxygen through photosynthesis. The oxygen will cause the phenol red solution to change color, indicating the presence of oxygen production.
Oh, dude, when you stick elodea cells in a salt solution, they're like, "Whoa, this is salty!" The salt solution messes with their osmotic balance, so water leaves the cells, making them shrink and look all sad. It's like when you eat too many chips and your fingers swell up – not a good time for anyone involved.
Cytolysis does not happen in the elodea because of the concentration of its cells. The concentration that surrounds the cells are usually less concentrated and therefore prevent cytolysis from occurring.
The blue BTB solution turning green in the presence of elodea indicates that photosynthesis is taking place. During photosynthesis, elodea utilizes carbon dioxide and water to produce glucose and oxygen, leading to a change in the color of the indicator solution from blue to green.
if starch is present in a substance, the solution IKI when combined will turn the substance a blue-black color. When the plant Elodea was combined with IKI the elodea did not turn a blue-black color. Hence elodea does not contain starch.
you would not see the same effect because there is sugar in one and not in the other
Elodea is an aquatic plant.