why leaves of the aquatic plants do not get spoilt
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hey the answer is ...
they donot get spoiled as aquatic plants are present in water. which provides moisture to the plants and keeps the green. so there is no chance of drying of leaves.
hope it helps uu
they donot get spoiled as aquatic plants are present in water. which provides moisture to the plants and keeps the green. so there is no chance of drying of leaves.
hope it helps uu
Answered by
0
You may be assuming that contact with water is what is required for rot, and that no other factors apply. Actually, the plant rot you’re likely envisioning happens to dead plant material and also requires moisture and oxygen, and is driven by fungal growth.
Decomposition under the water is a different process and can take longer. You also have more consumption components in the breakdown than you may have on land. However, in cold water with little lignin-attacking flora some logs might last indefinitely submerged and wind up passing into the fossil record
Your living aquatic plants is both adapted for water and has its cellular functions to keep it from decomposing.
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