yes!
True ^.^
Water nurtures the blood and oxygen plays a vita role in keeping you breathing.
cotton absorbs the most water, then wool, then nylon, ,and silk absorbs the least amount of water
For germination to occur a seed has to absorb water
Water can be depleted of it's oxygen by a number of different ways. Short of putting the water in a vacuum and "sucking" the dissolved oxygen out, oxygen-breathing organisms such as fish take oxygen from the water through respiration, for example. It is unlikely a large body of water to become completely deoxygenated due to the presence of photosynthetic aquatic organisms (plants) and the fact that oxygen is also dissolved in the water at the water's surface.
It absorbs it from the water
Oxygen is latent in the water, because the water absorbs gasses in the air, like how water absorbs sugar. Since the air (and so oxygen) is in the water, the oyster can use it.
oxygen, the plant absorbs carbon dioxide and water, and goes to the chlroplasts which change it into glucose and oxygen
Even boiled distilled water will still have oxygen, but the oxygen will not be in elemental form as a dissolved gas.
Assuming you mean the jelly-fish and not the tribe of people - the Irukandji absorbs oxygen from the water it floats in.
Pyrogallol,when in alkaline solution, it absorbs oxygen from the air, turning brown from a colourless solution. or simply none
Ozone (O3) is the ultraviolet radiation that absorbs oxygen molecules in the stratosphere. UV radiation breaks apart oxygen molecules (O2), allowing the loose oxygen atoms to combine with other oxygen molecules to form ozone.
When oxygen absorbs UV, it breaks it down. That atom then reacts again with oxygen to form ozone.
There are two: # oxygen, O2, absorbs UV-C and more energetic radiation, # ozone, O3, absorbs UV-B and more energetic radiation.
The water hyacinth is known as the "Terror of Bengal. " This rapid-growing plant absorbs the oxygen out of the water, killing other plants and organisms.
Paramecium absorbs oxygen directly from its surroundings through a process called diffusion. Oxygen from the water enters the paramecium's cell membrane and diffuses into the cytoplasm, where it is used in cellular respiration to produce energy.
Euglena obtains oxygen through a process called diffusion. It absorbs oxygen from the surrounding water through its cell membrane, which allows gases to pass in and out of the cell. This process enables euglena to survive by taking in the oxygen it needs for respiration.