Biology, asked by sudeb0018, 10 months ago

give reason why rate of transpiration is less than the water absorbed ​

Answers

Answered by hasnainraza1011h
0

Answer:

Answer:Relative humidity: As the relative humidity of the air surrounding the plant rises the transpiration rate falls. It is easier for water to evaporate into dryer air than into more saturated air. ... Wind will move the air around, with the result that the more saturated air close to the leaf is replaced by drier air.

Answered by Anonymous
1

&lt;!DOCTYPE html&gt;</p><p>&lt;html&gt;</p><p>&lt;head&gt;</p><p>&lt;style&gt;</p><p>#grad1 {</p><p>height: 300px;</p><p>background-color: red; /* For browsers that do not support gradients */</p><p>background-image: linear-gradient(to right, blue ,red,yellow,orange); /* Standard syntax (must be last) */</p><p>}</p><p>&lt;/style&gt;</p><p>&lt;/head&gt;</p><p>&lt;body&gt;</p><p></p><p>&lt;div id="grad1" style="text-align:center;margin:auto;color:#000000;font-size:20px;font-weight:bold"&gt;</p><h2>              Hello &lt;br&gt;</h2><p></p><p></p><p><strong>fewer leaves offer less opportunity for transpiration, so the rate will do down. (The rate of transpiration is constant per cm square of area. ... If a plant looses too much area of leaves it will wither and die.</strong><strong>)</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p><em>fewer leaves offer less opportunity for transpiration, so the rate will do down. (The rate of transpiration is constant per cm square of area. ... If a plant looses too much area of leaves it will wither and die.</em><em>)</em></p><p>&lt;/div&gt;</p><p></p><p>&lt;/body&gt;</p><p>&lt;/html&gt;</p><p>

Similar questions