Science, asked by paavni85, 11 months ago

Explain how plants take in. Carbondioxide through stomata

Answers

Answered by abdulqadir07
2

Answer:

Plants get the carbon dioxide they need from the air through their leaves. It moves by diffusion through small holes in the underside of the leaf called stomata. Guard cells control the size of the stomata so that the leaf does not lose too much water in hot, windy or dry conditions.

The lower part of the leaf is a spongy layer with loose-fitting cells. These let carbon dioxide reach the other cells in the leaf, and also let the oxygen produced in photosynthesis leave the leaf easily.

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Answered by sourya1794
43

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Stomata is the pore found on the epidermis of the leaves. It is covered and protected by guard cells. Stomata comes into function for the exchange of gases. during photosynthesis these pores open and start taking in CO2 . stomata releases oxygen as a by - product of this process.

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