yes. the water in the cell evaporates through the cell wall, removing the structure that keeps the cell in a rigid, fixed shape.
The cell wall and the vacuole. When not supplied enough water, the vacuole will shrivel up, causing a plant to wilt.
vacuole?
In a plant cell, it would be the vacuole. Since the vacuole contains tons of water when in a plant cell, it pushes against the cell walls, stiffening the plant, making it non-droopy (this is called turgor pressure). That's why when plants are dehydrated, they tend to droop- because of their shrunken vacuoles
water supply is similar to a vacuole because it holds water and maintains the water balance.
water supply is similar to a vacuole because it holds water and maintains the water balance.
A vacuole could be a storage center in a city because they both store things.
During plasmolysis, the vacuole shrinks because water leaves the cell's interior to balance the concentration of solutes outside the cell. This loss of water reduces turgor pressure, causing the vacuole, which stores water, to decrease in size. As a result, the cell membrane pulls away from the cell wall, leading to a state of dehydration and reduced cell volume.
vacuole
Typically, because the vacuole in plant cells is very large, it is located in the middle of the plant cell.
I think it will because the central vacuole gets bigger so it will go over the nucleus.
A metaphor for vacuole would be a toilet because it stores "food", waste, another materials such as toilet paper.
The vacuole can have several nicknames, like the refrigerator, the trash can, or the storage tank. This is because the vacuole's primary function is to store the cell's food, water, waste, and other materials.