Biology, asked by arindampalkgp, 1 year ago

Forests contribute in bringing rains.

Answers

Answered by GeniuSk99
9
During photosynthesis plants lose water as water vapour from their aerial parts through a process called as transpiration.

These water vapours go to the air in surrounding atmosphere and increase the normal moisture of the in it. It saturates the air faster and bring rains. This all happens in something called water cycle.

Simplifying it:

Plants release water vapor into the air in a process called transpiration. They release extra water in the form of water vapour from small holes of their leaves known as stomata ,that water vapour rises in the atmosphere and form new rain clouds and that water vapour returns to earth in form of rain .

Without transpiration most of that water would become runoff and enter streams and rivers, with very little evaporating.

Trees humidify air.

A typical tree breathes out 250 to 400 or more gallons of water per day through the amazingly large surface area of its leaves. While, some rainfall evaporates directly from the ground and from small plants (this can amount to most of a light rain), the great majority of inland rain is due to evapo-transpiration by trees.

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Answered by Strangerverse
0

Answer:

Explanation:transpiration

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