Elodea eliminates waste through a process called respiration. During respiration, the plant takes in oxygen and releases carbon dioxide as a waste product. This helps to keep the plant's cellular processes running smoothly and efficiently.
Yes, Elodea cells have a central vacuole. The central vacuole helps maintain turgor pressure in the cell and stores nutrients and waste products.
Protists eliminate wastes by allowing them to diffuse through the cell membrane.
They eat our waste and secrete their own. Much bacterial waste makes plant nutrients.
In elodea leaves, the substance in question can be considered a waste product if it is produced during metabolic processes and is not utilized by the plant for growth or energy. Typically, waste products in plants include excess oxygen released during photosynthesis or byproducts of cellular respiration. If the substance accumulates and negatively affects plant health or is expelled from the plant, it reinforces the classification as a waste product. However, if it has a role in the plant's lifecycle or is repurposed, it may not be considered waste.
Amoebas eliminate waste through a process called exocytosis, where waste materials are packaged into vesicles and expelled from the cell. These vesicles fuse with the cell membrane, releasing the waste outside the cell.
Yes, elodea (a type of aquatic plant) does have a central vacuole. The central vacuole in elodea helps maintain turgor pressure, store nutrients and waste products, and regulate cell growth.
eliminate waste.
Every organism (living thing) needs the ability to eliminate waste products, so yes.
Every organism (living thing) needs the ability to eliminate waste products, so yes.
To eliminate can mean to banish, exile, or remove someone. But eliminate also means to get rid of waste.
vertebrates
of course!
Yes, Elodea cells have a central vacuole. The central vacuole helps maintain turgor pressure in the cell and stores nutrients and waste products.
Grasshoppers eliminate their nitrogenous waste through the malipighian tubules that are on the digestive tract. Earthworms eliminate their nitrogenous waste by the nephridia.
Sharks eliminate waste through their cloaca, which is a single opening for waste, reproductive materials, and eggs or sperm to exit the body. Waste products are expelled mainly as urine, which helps regulate the shark's internal salt levels.
Protists eliminate wastes by allowing them to diffuse through the cell membrane.
The Contract with America was the Republican 104th Congress program to eliminate government waste.