All plants that live above water do this.
O2
The primary reactant that a plant takes in from the atmosphere is carbon dioxide (CO2). During the process of photosynthesis, plants absorb carbon dioxide through small openings in their leaves called stomata. This gas, along with water absorbed from the soil and sunlight, is used to produce glucose and oxygen, which are essential for the plant's growth and energy.
The plant anatomical structure that contains air pockets is called aerenchyma. Aerenchyma is a specialized type of parenchyma tissue found in the stems and roots of certain plants, particularly those that grow in waterlogged or anaerobic conditions. These air pockets facilitate gas exchange and buoyancy, allowing the plant to thrive in environments with low oxygen availability.
The breathing pore on a plant is called a stomata. Stomata are small openings typically found on the underside of leaves that allow for gas exchange, including the intake of carbon dioxide for photosynthesis and the release of oxygen and water vapor.
dephlogisticated air is oxygen gas; - so called by Dr. Priestly and others of his time.
Cells
Cells
A plant takes in carbon dioxide stores the carbon then releases oxygen as a waste gas.
To put it simply, wind. Or air movement. If you are looking for the scientific term for the heat exchange that takes place, it's convection. Is that what you were asking?
Oxygen gas is the gas present in air that takes part in a combustion reaction. It acts as the oxidizing agent in the reaction.
Nitrogen
Gas exchange for photosynthesis - CO2 from the air diffuses into the leaf, and 02 diffuses out of the leaf into the air
The gas you breathe in from the air is called oxygen.
The space that a gas takes up is called its volume.
There is no gas by the name of "air" because air is really combination of several gasses.
O2
Oxygen is given of