Plants take carbon dioxide from the air and use it to make solids such as sugars, cellulose, and other carbohydrates. This reduces the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, although not as greatly as chemical processes such as solution in sea water or the forming of carbonate minerals.
Plants absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere during photosynthesis to produce glucose and other organic compounds. This carbon is stored in the plant's tissues, acting as a sink for carbon and helping to reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, which is a greenhouse gas contributing to climate change.
Plants provide food and shelter for animals, and as they photosynthesize, regulate the levels of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. As food producers, plants are eaten by herbivores, which in turn become food for the omnivores and carnivores. Plants are also the homes of many animals, small and big. Plants provide shelter from predators and harsh factors of the environment, like the hot sun, cold snow and torrential rain. When plants photosynthesize, they take in carbon dioxide and give out the fresh oxygen that all the animals need for respiration. Plants are crucial for the health of all animals. On the other hand, plants depend on animals for nutrients, pollination and seed dispersal, and as the animals consume plants, they regulate the numbers of different species of plants. While plants provide oxygen for the animals as they photosynthesize, animals respire and give out carbon dioxide for plants to make food with. It is an interdependent relationship here. This is not to say that plants do not respire themselves. They do, it is just that the amount of carbon dioxide they give out is not enough for the plants to make enough food with. As such, plants need animals. Also, when animals die, they decompose and become natural fertilizers for plants. Being pretty much immobile, plants also depend on animals to pollinate them for reproduction. And when the fertilized plants eventually produce seeds encased in fruits, animals eat them or carry them along on their fur, dispersing the seeds far and wide, ensuring the continuity of the plant species.
Trees act as a large reserve for carbon by taking in CO2 gas from the air and incorporating it into their tissues as carbohydrates. Many animals work as carbon reservoirs as well by eating plants to receive carbon and then storing it into their tissues.
Plants release oxygen as a byproduct of photosynthesis, which is the process they use to convert sunlight into energy. During photosynthesis, plants take in carbon dioxide and water and produce oxygen. This oxygen is then released into the air through tiny openings in the leaves called stomata.
Plants take in carbon from the carbon dioxide in the air, and convert it to carbohydrates and store it.
Plants take in carbon from carbon dioxide in the air and convert it to carbohydrates and keep it with them.
Plants take in carbon from carbon dioxide in the air and convert it to carbohydrates and keep it with them.
Plants take carbon dioxide from the air and use it to make solids such as sugars, cellulose, and other carbohydrates. This reduces the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, although not as greatly as chemical processes such as solution in sea water or the forming of carbonate minerals.
Plants absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere during photosynthesis to produce glucose and other organic compounds. This carbon is stored in the plant's tissues, acting as a sink for carbon and helping to reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, which is a greenhouse gas contributing to climate change.
they produce oxygen
Plants absorb Co2. Carbon dioxide. Which is Carbon and oxygen. The carbon is used in the plant and the oxygen is released, (or reflected as you could say).
I would say plants. They 'breathe' in carbon dioxide and excrete oyxgen and sugars.
to sink a ship is 'couler un bateau' in French.
the north atlantic
* to sink (intrans. - that is without an object) - sinken - sinkt - sank - ist gesunken. * to sink (trans. - that is with an object) - versenken.
Yes, carbon from trees, plants and animal life (maybe even some early dinosaurs) was stored in fossil fuels 300 million years ago.