Created by Anisha Rai
over 8 years ago
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Question | Answer |
How does carbon dioxide enter and leave flowering plants? | By diffusion through the stomata |
How are most of the water and mineral ions absorbed in flowering plants? | They are absorbed by the roots |
How is the surface area of the roots increased? | Root hairs |
How is the surface area of the leaves increased? | Flattened shape and internal air spaces |
Why do plants have a stomata? | To obtain carbon dioxide from the atmosphere To remove oxygen produced in photosynthesis |
Where do plants mainly lose water vapour? | From the stomata in their leaves |
In what conditions is evaporation more rapid? | Hot, dry and windy conditions |
What happens if plants lose water faster than it is replaced by the roots? | The stomata can close to prevent wilting |
Which cells control the size of the stomata and where are they placed? | Guard cells Surround the stomata |
Which three transport systems does a plant have? | Xylem Transpiration Stream Phloem |
What do xylem tissues transport? | Water and mineral ions from the roots to the stem and leaves |
What is the transpiration stream? | The movement of water from the roots through the xylem and out of the leaves |
What do phloem tissues transport? What is the process called? | Dissolved sugars from the leaves to the rest of the plant, including growing regions and the storage organs Translocation |
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