Science, asked by sharnam64, 8 months ago

How plants exchange gases during night with stomata closed​

Answers

Answered by havellshavells
1

Answer:

Oxygen, a poisonous (to the plant) byproduct of photosynthesis, exits through the stomata. At night, the glucose recombines with oxygen, releasing energy as the glucose molecule breaks back into water and carbon dioxide. The excess water exits through the stomata in a process called transpiration.

Explanation:

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Answered by ᏚarcasticᏚoul
9

Hey there this is your answer...!!!

Oxygen, a poisonous (to the plant) byproduct of photosynthesis, exits through the stomata. At night, the glucose recombines with oxygen, releasing energy as the glucose molecule breaks back into water and carbon dioxide. The excess water exits through the stomata in a process called transpiration

hope this helps...!!!

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