well,no..
First this is about science stuff- When a cell takes in alot of salt it bursts and dies. This happens a lot on animal cells, but on plant cellls it is alittle harder because of its cell wall.
look at this question and answer this should help a tone it helped me.
Why_do_grocery_store_owners_spray_their_fresh_vegetables_with_water
osmosis-the diffusion of water through a selectively permeable cell membrane
diffusion-causes many substances to move across a cell membrane but doesn't require the cell to use energy.
Excessive salt in the soil can harm plants by disrupting their ability to take up water and nutrients, leading to stunted growth or even death. Salt accumulation can also alter the soil structure, making it harder for plants to grow. Therefore, it's important to maintain a salt balance in the soil to ensure the health and vitality of plants.
Excessive salt can be harmful to soil by disrupting the balance of nutrients and causing desiccation in plants. It can also hinder water absorption and reduce soil fertility. It is important to monitor and manage salt levels in soil to maintain healthy plant growth.
There are approximately 52 chlor-alkali plants in the United States. These plants produce chlorine and caustic soda through the electrolysis of salt brine.
Yes, excessive salt in soil can negatively affect plant growth by causing dehydration, reducing nutrient uptake, and inhibiting root growth. It can lead to symptoms like leaf burn and stunted growth in plants. It's important to monitor soil salinity levels and take steps to mitigate salt accumulation for optimal plant health.
Not all living things need salt. While salt is essential for human health and the functioning of many organisms, there are organisms like certain plants and bacteria that can live without salt. The need for salt varies depending on the organism's biology and environment.
If you drink only salt water you go crazy. If (most) plants are given salt water they die. The salt (NaCl) concentrates and becomes poisonous.
they just die why u asking me?
Plants that have not edapted to growing in salt water will die if this is the only water they are given. Tap water is generally safe to grow plants in. In two weeks, if you were to water two identical plants, one with salt water, and one with tap water, the tap water plant would continue to grow, while the salt water plant would die.
All plants to a certain degree contain salt. This is because salt is everywhere in any given environment in North America.
They Die.
too much salt in the water inhibits the plants ability to draw water from the soil and eventually it will die of thirst
Salt makes plants wilt because salt is hydrophilic, or a substance that encourages water to be excreted from the plants, causing the plant to wilt and even die.
it's makes them die from the unhealthiness.
Most plants would die in salt water.
Normally there are more solvents in the water inside the plant. Water flows in, but salt water has lots of solvents (the salt) so the water flows back out. So eventually, plants die from dehydration. They won't die right after they move to salt water. But they will they after several days.
It needs to be a plant that naturally grows in salt water. Other plants are not adapted to salt water and will die.
the plant will eventually die