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TEORI

A plant is an organism that arguably saturates most of its life primarily in water and soil minerals. These
absorption lines are frozen as one of the unified plant metabolic systems. Plants absorption or transport
to spread the results of photosynthesis and transport energy to the rest of the body. These transport
products serve to stimulate plant growth and growth. These products include nutrients that exist in both
soil and nutrients that are added to plants. These nutrients are absorbed in the form of ions by the plant
rooting that is then dispersed throughout the body to supply any plant metabolic activity.

Most plants absorb water from the soil by means of their roots. Plants soak up water through small
pipes in their roots and stems. Water moves up the trunk of a plant, to the leaves and to the flowers.
Some water is used by plants to make food and others will evaporate (water turns to gas) through
microscopic holes in their leaves and flowers, helping the plants grow and keep the cells strong, so that
the plants do not wither.

The root absorption is primarily done by a mucous root hair that is constantly submerged in the ground.
Water diffuses into the root feathers, on the walls of the cell entering the free space passes through
osmosis plasma membranes and again diffuses into the plasma. Because the organelles are limited to
differential permeable membranes, the water transport will both have to use osmosis mechanisms.

Uptake in plants is due to diffusion process, osmosis, active transport and inhibition as a water-
transport, mineral and metabolic system. The exhibition is the process of absorbing water and minerals
into the space between the cell walls so that the cell wall expands, the process is based on the
gravitational pull between the molecules. The walls of this expanding cell are due to water entry, this
process of water entry and mineral entry as a result of the difference in pressure between the koloid
environment of land and root. The coloid concentration of the land is higher than the concentration of
the root region so that water and minerals flow in the rooting area. Moreover, water enters rooting as a
result of rising attraction resulting from the transpiration process.

The exhibit is influenced by two factor, which is temperature and potential osmosis compounds put in
display. Temperature does not significantly affect the weariness of the exhibition, while osmosis
potential can affect the velocity of the exhibition if hamper's potential difference is similar, transport will
be difficult, as will the difference in concentration in both. The exhibition rates are directly proportional
to a temperature rise and an inverse proportion to a increase in substance concentration.

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