Biology, asked by tishaaggarwal06, 8 months ago


Why does a plasmolyzed cell swells up in water

Answers

Answered by samman03
2

Answer:

Explanation:

Plant cells are enclosed by a rigid cell wall. When the plant cell is placed in a hypotonic solution, it takes up water by osmosis and starts to swell, but the cell wall prevents it from bursting. The plant cell is said to have become 'turgid', i.e. swollen and hard.

Answered by BrainFire
1

Answer:

the cells don't have a cell wall as a result when in water they explode as water enter in the cells and for this reason they swell up

Explanation:

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