Science, asked by oLove11, 1 year ago

Q3.Why plants die under water logged condition?

Answers

Answered by tiashasha
58
hi

Waterlogging occurs whenever the soil is so wet that there is insufficient oxygen in the pore space for plant roots to be able to adequately respire. ... There is no universal level of soil oxygen that can identify waterlogged conditions for all plants.
There are at least two reasons why overwatering can harm plants. One reason is a lack of oxygen in a waterlogged soil damages or kills plant roots. Plant roots require oxygen for cellular respiration. You could say plant roots "suffocate" without oxygen. Another reason is that anaerobic microbes in a waterlogged soil produce toxic waste products that can harm plant roots. Thus, even if the plant roots have sufficient oxygen that they obtain internally from aboveground, the roots could still be damaged by the microbial waste products. Microbes in waterlogged soils also promote conversion of some mineral nutrients from nontoxic to toxic forms. For example, in waterlogged soils, nitrate is converted to ammonium, sulfate to sulfide and manganese ion +4 to manganese ion +2.

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hope this will helps u 

Answered by AryanDeo
87
well I don't have an exact ans. but this may help u...
plants die under water logged condition because soil gets fully saturated with water which leads to deficient oxygen supply to the roots and prevents carbon dioxide to diffuse away. Oxygen deficiency in roots causes a switch from aerobic to anaerobic respiration. so, root function gets reduced or stops and the roots start to die off followed by death of plant.
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