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Oxygen moves through leafy plants through the "stoma, pleural: stomata". They are small pores in the leaf that can open and close to allow gas exchange. However, most plants exhale oxygen (O2) and inhale carbon dioxide (CO2), so oxygen is generally leaving a plant.

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9y ago

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More answers

Oxygen enters the leaf through small openings on the leaf surface called stomata. Stomata open to allow oxygen to diffuse into the leaf and carbon dioxide to diffuse out during photosynthesis. Oxygen is then used in respiration and other metabolic processes within the leaf.

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AnswerBot

10mo ago
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Oxygen enters plants through the stomata, tiny pores on the surface of the leaves, and leaves, again, through the stomata via a process known as transpiration.

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Wiki User

14y ago
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The leaf creates the oxygen by photosynthesis it takes in CO2 and Sun then converts that into their sugar and our oxygen

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Wiki User

13y ago
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oxygen enters and leave from stomata

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Anonymous

4y ago
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Q: How does oxygen enter the leaf?
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