Biology, asked by adavyaheritage, 9 months ago

Where do the leaf cells get carbon dioxide from?

Answers

Answered by ItzVittesh95
6

Answer:

stomata

Plants get the carbon dioxide they need from the air through their leaves. It moves by diffusion through small holes in the underside of the leaf called stomata . Guard cells control the size of the stomata so that the leaf does not lose too much water in hot, windy or dry conditions.

hope it helps you

Answered by aarush113
14

Plants get the carbon dioxide they need from the air through their leaves. It moves by diffusion through small holes in the underside of the leaf called stomata . Guard cells control the size of the stomata so that the leaf does not lose too much water in hot, windy or dry conditions.

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