carbon dioide does not leave the leaf but oygen does
stomata
Oxygen and carbon dioxide diffuse in and out of a leaf through small openings called stomata. During photosynthesis, carbon dioxide enters the leaf through the stomata and oxygen exits. In the process of respiration, oxygen enters the leaf and carbon dioxide exits. This exchange of gases occurs through diffusion, where molecules move from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration.
A leaf gives out oxygen through a process called photosynthesis. During photosynthesis, plants use sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose and oxygen.
Nothing. Stomata don't have leaves, and stomata is the plural. You mean leaf of a stoma. If, theoretically, you were asking what substances exited the stomata and/or a stoma of a leaf, although of course you mean no such thing, then my answer would be: Typically, oxygen does.
The leaf first takes in Carbon Dioxide, or CO2, into it's self through the bottom of the leaf. It uses the CO2 and makes sugars out of it, water, and sunlight. This reaction makes a byproduct, Oxygen, that the leaf lets out, which we use to breathe.
Carbon dioxide and oxygen enter and leave the plant through the stomata, on the underside of leaves.
stomata
Carbon dioxide enters through small pores called stomata on the underside of the leaf. Oxygen is released through the same stomata during photosynthesis.
A leaf takes in sunlight and carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide enters a leaf through small openings called stomata on the surface of the leaf. The stomata open to allow carbon dioxide to diffuse into the leaf from the surrounding air. Once inside the leaf, carbon dioxide is used during photosynthesis to make glucose and oxygen.
through the pores in the stomata of the leaf
the leaf!
Stomata and guard cells.
Carbon dioxide uses stomata as its route into the leaf for photosynthesis. Stomata are small pores on the leaf surface that allow gas exchange, with carbon dioxide entering the leaf through these openings during photosynthesis.
the leaf has super little holes. The holes breathe in the carbon dioxide.
carbon dioxide im doing a project now
by the leaf