through xylum with the help of transpiration pull
Capillary action, transpiration, and root pressure move water up through the plant.
Plants move water through their cells using a process called transpiration, where water evaporates from the leaves and creates a negative pressure that pulls water up from the roots. Water is brought into the cells through a process called osmosis, where water molecules move from an area of low concentration (soil) to an area of high concentration (root cells).
Yes, hydrogen bonds between water molecules create cohesion, allowing water to move up plants through capillary action. This cohesion helps water molecules stick together and travel through the plant's vascular system, such as through xylem vessels.
Cohesion force among water molecules and transpiration pull.
Plants moved onto land after algae was entrapped in evaporating ponds, and cast up to the sea shore, and as a majority died, a few survived to be the plants we see on land today.
hydrogen bonding
it can move up the xylem and in both directions in the phloem
hydrogen bonding
Capillary action, transpiration, and root pressure move water up through the plant.
Capillary action, transpiration, and root pressure move water up through the plant.
The force of attraction that helps move water up through plants is called capillary action. This process occurs due to the cohesive and adhesive properties of water, which allow it to be drawn up through the small tubes in plants called xylem.
Capillary action, which is the result of adhesive forces between water and the walls of narrow tubes, helps move water up to plants through their roots and stems. This force allows water to defy gravity and be pulled upward against the force of gravity.
water
ground water plants.
Xylem is the name of the tissue in plants that conducts water.
Do all the plants have tubes that move water and nutrients to all of their organs?
Plants move water through their cells using a process called transpiration, where water evaporates from the leaves and creates a negative pressure that pulls water up from the roots. Water is brought into the cells through a process called osmosis, where water molecules move from an area of low concentration (soil) to an area of high concentration (root cells).