Biology, asked by kaustavdatta25, 11 months ago

34. When water flows into the cells and out of the cells
and are in equilibrium, the cell is said to be
(1) Flaccid
(2) Turgid
(3) Plasmolysed (4) Deplasmolysed​

Answers

Answered by sumeetmalu65
2

Answer:

1) FLACCID

Explanation:

If the external solution balances the osmotic pressure of the cytoplasm, it is said to be isotonic. When the water flow into the cell and out of the cells are in equilibrium the cell is called flaccid.

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Answered by steffiaspinno
0

Flaccid is the cell which when water flows into the cells and out of the cells and are in equilibrium.

A flaccid cell is one in which water flows in and out of the cell in balance. The plasma membrane is not squeezed tightly against the cell wall in a flaccid cell, which may be seen by immersing the plant cell in an isotonic solution.

The tonicity of the extracellular fluid determines the flaccidity of a plant cell. When a plant cell is immersed in a hypertonic solution, more water departs the cell than enters, resulting in a flaccid plant cell.

This is referred to as plasmolysis, and the cell is considered to have been plasmolyzed. A cell put in a hypotonic solution, on the other hand, will enlarge and become turgid as more water may enter the cell.

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