How does the plant detect the touch, and how do the leaves move in response?
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Answered by
77
Answer:
Certain plants like the Mimosa pudica release some chemicals from its stem as soon as we touch the plant.
Our touch is a stimulus for it and it closes its leaves in response.
The chemicals produced by touch forces water of the leaves to move out of the cell and due to loss of turgor pressure, they droop.
Certain plants like the Mimosa pudica release some chemicals from its stem as soon as we touch the plant.
Our touch is a stimulus for it and it closes its leaves in response.
The chemicals produced by touch forces water of the leaves to move out of the cell and due to loss of turgor pressure, they droop.
Answered by
8
Answer:
In plants there is no specilized tissue in plants for the conduction of information. The plants use chemical-electrical means convey this information from cell to cell
plants cells change shape by changing the amount of water in them ,resulting in swelling or shrinking and therefore in changing shapes
Explanation:
In plants there is no specilized tissue in plants for the conduction of information. The plants use chemical-electrical means convey this information from cell to cell
plants cells change shape by changing the amount of water in them ,resulting in swelling or shrinking and therefore in changing shapes
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