(brooke,13) water is soaked up through roots & carbon dioxide is just absorbed Carbon dioxide is absorbed by the following process. There is a spongy mesophyll, a loose tissue with many air spaces between its cells. These air spaces connect with the extrerior through stomata porelike openings in the underside of the leaf that allow carbon dioxide and oxygen to diffuse into and out of the leaf.
CO2 enters through stomata. They are tiny pores on leaves.
Amphistomatous describes a certain type of leaf morphology in drought adapted plants. These plants have stomates (the openings in the epidermis which allow CO2 to diffuse into the leaf) on both sides of the leaf.
Gas exchange for photosynthesis - CO2 from the air diffuses into the leaf, and 02 diffuses out of the leaf into the air
In photorespiration, O2 replaces CO2 in a non-productive, wasteful reaction. Photorespiration occurs when the CO2 levels inside a leaf become low, which happens on hot dry days when a plant is forced to close its stomata to prevent excess water loss.
ok...well, the answer is simple yet complicated... the sun sends down photonic radiation, when it shines on the earth. the photonic radiation [light and heat from the sun] then hits the leaf. the moving of the photons is one form of kenetic energy. the clorophyyl in the leaf's cells then work like solar panels. it gets heated by the sun's photonic radiation and UV radiation, and it is converted into ,well, Oxygen, water, and some type of sugar. the clorophyyl does this by bringing in CO2 [carbon dioxide] from the atmosphere. then, the CO2 is compounded with water, and forms sugar, extra water, and oxegen. the excess water and oxygen is "squirted" outside, while the sugar is converted into energy inside the cell, or stored. the bringing in of CO2 and expelling O2 is the kenetic energy.
Stomata
The leaf collects Carbon Dioxcide (CO2) and somehow turns it into Oxygen
photosynthesis
Stomata
what does a leaf do on a plantRespiration: It draws in outside air for its CO2 content, expires O2Photosynthesis: Where Co2 is converted into sugar.Excretes excess water.Produces toxins to ward off herbivores.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the molecule that enters a leaf from the atmosphere during photosynthesis.
RUBP or PEP will absorb it. CO2 enter the leaf from air.
CO2 enters through stomata. They are tiny pores on leaves.
oxygen in day time, co2 at night
The openings in the epidermis of a leaf that let CO2 into the leaves are called stomata. Stomata are small pores primarily located on the underside of the leaf that allow for gas exchange, including the intake of CO2 for photosynthesis and the release of oxygen.
Carbon dioxide leaves a leaf through small openings called stomata on the surface of the leaf. The concentration of carbon dioxide inside the leaf is higher than in the atmosphere, causing it to diffuse out of the leaf through the stomata.
Out of what cell? well, if it's out of plants, CO2 from air diffuse in to cellular spaces in the mesophyll layer. CO2 from respiration move out of the leaf also by diffusion:)