Biology, asked by karan5880, 11 months ago

stomata closed at night is it true​


zoya0710: yes
zoya0710: true

Answers

Answered by mahi6859
0

If I am not mistaken the stomata are closed during the night. As a result I have a hard time to imagine how the plant can get the O2 it needs for respiration during the night. I thought the plant could produce the O2 internally through some chemical reaction. Such reaction might include splitting H2O absorbed through the roots in two. Or maybe the O2 diffuses well enough through the plant tissues.

as it is a scientific prove.

Not all plants have their stomata closed during the night. A notable exception are Crassulacean acid metabolism(CAM) plants that keep their stomata closed during the day and open it during the night. This is a common evolutionary strategy with Xerophytes.

There are also 2 other types of metabolic pathways namely C3 and C4. As a consequence we get what is called a C3 and C4 plant, which aptly represent the predominant metabolic pathway it employs.

Additionally plant cells, like all life, can produce energy without oxygen by Glycolysis. Furthermore, when stomata is closed, oxygen respiration is restricted, not blocked entirely. Finally it might be important to note that plant metabolism is reduced during the night.

Answered by PRATHAMABD
0

&lt;body&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;b&gt;YES ITS TRUE</p><p>&lt;meter value="2" min="0" max="10"&gt;2 out of 10&lt;/meter&gt;</p><p>&lt;br&gt;&lt;meter value="5" min="0" max="10"&gt;2 out of 10&lt;/meter&gt;</p><p>&lt;br&gt;&lt;meter value="9" min="0" max="10"&gt;2 out of 10&lt;/meter&gt;</p><p>&lt;br&gt;&lt;meter value="5" min="0" max="10"&gt;2 out of 10&lt;/meter&gt;</p><p>&lt;br&gt;&lt;meter value="0.6"&gt;60%&lt;/meter&gt;


PRATHAMABD: if u need explanation then tell
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