Stomata are important for the plant because it is through these spaces (stomata) that the plant mainly loses water. This is a process known as Transpiration.
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1st year A-Level Biology student.
No, humans do not have stomata. Stomata are microscopic pores found on the surface of plant leaves and stems that are used for gas exchange and transpiration. Humans have lungs for gas exchange and do not require stomata for this purpose.
Stoma (plural stomata), they are the pores used for gas exchange.
No, plants require open stomata to take in carbon dioxide for photosynthesis. Without the exchange of gases through the stomata, the plant cannot produce food efficiently.
Stomata are tiny pores on the surface of plant leaves that allow for gas exchange, such as the intake of carbon dioxide and the release of oxygen during photosynthesis.
Large numbers of leaf stomata typically indicate that the plant is adapted to a drier or hotter climate. Stomata allow for gas exchange and water loss, so having more stomata can help the plant regulate these processes in challenging climatic conditions by facilitating increased transpiration.
The stomata in a plant has many important functions. Located on the leaves of plants the stomata take in air for plant respiration and aid in photosynthesis.
There are no stomates on the stem of the plant.
A plant respirates through the stomata in its leaves. It also performs photosynthesis through the stomata as well.
Oxygen is released out of the plant through stomata as a product of photosynthesis.
plant respire through there leaf but from what i know that it could be stomata so it could be leaf or stomata..
No, humans do not have stomata. Stomata are microscopic pores found on the surface of plant leaves and stems that are used for gas exchange and transpiration. Humans have lungs for gas exchange and do not require stomata for this purpose.
stomata
The Stomata is the small opening on the underside of the left that allows for the absorption of CO2. A plant can open and close the stomata to help cut down on moisture loss.
They both make the plant and fish breath
Stoma (plural stomata), they are the pores used for gas exchange.
In the underside of the leaf
stomata.