Water leaving the plant's leaves creates a pressure gradient whereby it sucks in water from the ground.
Vascular means pertaining to vessels which transport fluids (whether in plants or animals). In plants, phloem and xylem are vessels that carry water and food through the plant. In animals, arteries and veins carries blood
Ferns and mosses are examples of plants that do not have tubes for transporting water and nutrients like vascular plants do. Instead, they rely on other methods, such as diffusion and absorption, to transport these essential resources.
The plants could mean a cluster, a group of plants.
Passive transport is a form of transport that does not require an input of energy. Examples include diffusion, osmosis and facilitated diffusion. On the other hand, active transport is a form of transport that requires an input of energy in the form of ATP (adenosine triphosphate). This energy is required for processes such as moving molecules against the concentration gradient.
Transpiration is man-made, so it would be an non-example of the natural water cycle. Transpiration is the passage of gases through fine tubes because of differences in pressure or tempature.
Precipitation typically occurs before transpiration in the water cycle. Precipitation supplies water to plants, which is then utilized in the process of transpiration where plants release water vapor into the atmosphere.
It is called transpiration: the act or process of releasing liquid, especially through the stomata of plant tissue or the pores of the skin. On human skin, the process is called perspiration, although transpiration is sometimes used to mean water release through the mucous membranes.
Transpiration is the process by which plants release water vapor through tiny pores on their leaves called stomata. This loss of water vapor helps plants regulate their temperature and draw up nutrients from the soil through the process of transpiration pull. Additionally, transpiration plays a key role in the water cycle by returning water vapor to the atmosphere.
It seems like there might be a typo in your question. Did you mean "transpiration"? Transpiration is the process where plants absorb water through their roots and then release water vapor through their leaves into the atmosphere. It helps plants regulate their internal temperature and also transports nutrients throughout the plant.
well developed transport tubes for plants to obtain water and food.
Transpiration is the process in which plants absorb water through their roots and release it into the atmosphere through their leaves as water vapor. This contributes to the water cycle by returning water back into the atmosphere, where it can eventually condense and fall back to Earth as precipitation.
to transport food and water through phloem and xylem.
Transpiration is the process by which water is evaporated from the surface of plant leaves into the atmosphere. It is one of the components of the water cycle, where water vapor is released from plants, rises into the atmosphere, cools, condenses, and eventually falls back to Earth as precipitation.
I assume you mean transpiration. His transpiration is way above the normal human transpiration, although he doesn't drink much water.
Hard to answer because transpiration rate is affected by many factors.This is from wikipediaThe rate of transpiration is directly related to the degree of stomatal opening, and to the evaporative demand of the atmosphere surrounding the leaf. The amount of water lost by a plant depends on its size, along with the surrounding light intensity, temperature, humidity, and wind speed (all of which influence evaporative demand). Soil water supply and soil temperature can influence stomatal opening, and thus transpiration rate.Maybe you mean what is a definition of transpiration rate?Transpiration rate i.e. the rate at which water is lost by a plant. Water can be lost from various parts of plants especially leaves but also stems, flowers and roots.
Transpiration is a process where the water leaves the leaf of a plant through their stroma. I do not see how the "steamboat" can be applied to "transpiration". Do you mean "transportation?"
Transpiration is the process where plants release water vapor through pores in their leaves. Evaporation, on the other hand, is the process where liquid water turns into water vapor due to heat or other external factors. Both processes contribute to the water cycle by returning water to the atmosphere.