salt or a water solution containing alot of salt
hypotonic solution
No! It shrinks...
Placed in a hypertonic solution with a higher solute concentration than inside the cell, causing water to leave the cell and the cell to shrink and shrivel.
When a red blood cell is exposed to an isotonic solution, there is no net movement of water into or out of the cell. This means that the cell maintains its normal shape and volume, as the concentration of solutes inside and outside the cell is balanced.
blood cells are created in the bone marrow.
The water from the cytoplasm within the red blood cell will move out of the cell into the environment and the cell itself will shrivel up.
3. water from the blood cell into its environment
turns into a black lump of blood type.
A red blood cell when placed in salty solution shrinks and becomes wrinkled.
Water will leave the cell and the cell will shrink and shrivel.
Red bone marrow
If a red blood cell is placed in a 50% NaCl solution, the cell will undergo a process called crenation, where water leaves the cell due to the high concentration of salt outside. This causes the cell to shrink and lose its normal shape, which can ultimately lead to cell damage or death.