Biology, asked by helloaadi2018, 11 months ago

Spongy mesophylls in leaves bring up water to the leaves for use in making food. Do the leaves use up all the water? What happens to the water left over?.

Answers

Answered by tharanipenmetsa
0

Here is your answer

Hope it helps u


When the plant opens its stomata to let in carbon dioxide, water on the surface of the cells of the spongy mesophyll and palisade mesophyllevaporates and diffuses out of the leaf. This process is called transpiration.

Water is drawn from the cells in the xylem to replace that which has been lost from the leaves.


Water molecules inside the xylem cells are strongly attracted to each other. There is strong cohesion between the molecules because of hydrogen bonding. A continuous column of water is therefore pulled up the stem in the transpiration stream by evaporation from the leaves.

Answered by shubhangi5062
1
answer is plants use only 1% for photosynthesis and remaining water through the stomata water will lose through the transpiration process ( loss of water in the form of water vapour) .. I hope My answer will help u..
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