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- Transpiration - Wikipedia
Transpiration is the process of water movement through a plant and its evaporation from aerial parts, such as leaves, stems and flowers It is a passive process that requires no energy expense by the plant [1]
- Transpiration | Definition, Mechanism, Facts | Britannica
transpiration, in botany, a plant’s loss of water, mainly through the stomata of leaves Stomatal openings are necessary to admit carbon dioxide to the leaf interior and to allow oxygen to escape during photosynthesis
- Transpiration - Definition, Function and Examples | Biology . . .
Transpiration is the evaporation of water from plants Most of the water absorbed by the roots of a plant—as much as 99 5 percent—is not used for growth or metabolism; it is excess water, and it leaves the plant through transpiration
- Transpiration – Definition, Factors, Types, and Importance
Transpiration is the biological process by which water is released in the air as water vapor through minute pores called stomata It occurs through the aerial parts of the plant, such as leaves, stems, and flowers It happens during daytime when leaves absorb sunlight and get heated up causing water to evaporate from its surface
- Transpiration - GeeksforGeeks
What is Transpiration? Plants release the excess water through evaporation through different plant parts such as stems or the stomata present on the surface of the leaves by the process of transpiration The evaporation of water from leaves creates a suction pull which can pull water to great heights in the plants
- Transpiration - What and Why? | Transpiration - Water . . .
Transpiration - What and Why? What is transpiration? In actively growing plants, water is continuously evaporating from the surface of leaf cells exposed to air This water is replaced by additional absorption of water from the soil
- Transpiration in Plants: Types, Mechanism, Factors, Uses
Transpiration is defined as water loss in the form of water vapor from the internal tissues of aerial parts of the plant body under the influence of sunlight and regulated to some extent by the cell's protoplasm
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