the cell wall is semi-permiable which means it lets certain things in and out
Adhesion is important for living organisms because it allows cells to stick together and form tissues and organs. In plants, adhesion helps water move up through the xylem vessels. In animals, adhesion is needed for cells to stick to blood vessel walls and for platelets to form blood clots.
A mixture of water and living cells is known as a suspension, where the cells are suspended in the water but are not dissolved. This mixture can commonly be found in biological systems such as blood or cytoplasm within cells.
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).
In a hyptonic solution, water will move into the cells of the egg, and it will swell, and the cells will burst.
water
Living.
A tree, which doesn't move away, is considered a living thing because it has cells. So, all living things have cells wether they move or not, or else they would NOT be living.
Osmosis is important to cell functions because it keeps the cell alive
Adhesion is important for living organisms because it allows cells to stick together and form tissues and organs. In plants, adhesion helps water move up through the xylem vessels. In animals, adhesion is needed for cells to stick to blood vessel walls and for platelets to form blood clots.
A mixture of water and living cells is known as a suspension, where the cells are suspended in the water but are not dissolved. This mixture can commonly be found in biological systems such as blood or cytoplasm within cells.
Pure water contains no cells whatsoever. Water is composed of molecules.
who was the first person to observe living cells in a drop of pond water.
osmosis
A non living "thing" cannot move without a living thing or a force moving it.
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).
Cells
Fish are the perfect example of osmosis in living organisms. Salt Water fish are constantly drinking because they are always losing water to their environments. On the other hand, fresh water fish almost never need to drink because they are constantly absorbing water through their skin. Could somebody improve this because this doesn't exactly say how osmosis actually happens in living things it just says about salt fish which might have soemthing to do with it/ / Osmosis is when water moves from an area of high concentration to low, which is why salt water fish lose water ( it's less concentrated around them, because of the salt, than in them)