CO2 enters through stomata. They are tiny pores on leaves.
Gas exchange for photosynthesis - CO2 from the air diffuses into the leaf, and 02 diffuses out of the leaf into the air
No it is respirationYes,it is photosynthesis. CO2 is oxidized into glucose using water and light energy
The oxygen produced by photosynthesis is released into the air where it may combine with other chemicals to form oxides, or may remain in the air as O2 and be breathed in by animals where it is converted to carbon dioxide.
All plants need carbon dioxide to complete photosynthesis. Mammals take in oxygen and breath out CO2. It is the exact opposite for plants. The stomata on the plants act as lungs for the CO2 to enter the plant. The plant then puts out oxygen into the air. Since plants need CO2 and they are putting out oxygen, extra CO2 in the air will hope the plant grow.
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.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the molecule that enters a leaf from the atmosphere during photosynthesis.
So animals can take it in and produce more CO2
Water and CO2 is entered. Products are glucose and Oxygen.
Small openings on the underside of the leaf called stomata allow CO2 to enter and O2 to exit during photosynthesis. Each stoma is surrounded by guard cells that control its opening and closing to regulate gas exchange.
Through the stomata, openings in the leaf surface. By diffusion. There are three photosynthesis processes, C3, C4, and CAM. (These names describe part of the chemistry.) The desert plants (and some epiphytes) use CAM, for in this process, the stomata are closed during the day, and open at night. The plant absorbs CO2 into its system as a complex chemical (the CAM bit) over night, and during the day, the stomata close and the plant converts the CAM chemical into CO2 to be used for photosynthesis in the usual way. Normal plants open their stomata during the day, and CO2 diffuses in and O2 out.
photosynthesis
The leaf first takes in Carbon Dioxide, or CO2, into it's self through the bottom of the leaf. It uses the CO2 and makes sugars out of it, water, and sunlight. This reaction makes a byproduct, Oxygen, that the leaf lets out, which we use to breathe.
Carbon dioxide uses stomata as its route into the leaf for photosynthesis. Stomata are small pores on the leaf surface that allow gas exchange, with carbon dioxide entering the leaf through these openings during photosynthesis.
A plants leaves are used to catch photons (sunrays) from the sun, carbon dioxide, and water. Those are the three basic ingredients needed for a plant to complete photosynthesis.
The leaf collects Carbon Dioxcide (CO2) and somehow turns it into Oxygen
RUBP or PEP will absorb it. CO2 enter the leaf from air.
Carbon dioxide enters through leaf pores, known as stomata, and is required for photosynthesis to occur. Carbon dioxide is one of the raw materials needed by plants to produce glucose and oxygen during photosynthesis.