Yes. Some plants prefer direct sunlight and some need less.
Nutrients, soil properties, light, water availability, the presence of herbivores, pathogens, parasites, and mutualists
The color of a light does affect a plants growth. Plants absorb certain colors of light better than others, and, essentially, the more light a plant can absorb, the more it can grow.
Yes, the color of light affect the growth of the mongo and any other green plant. This is because some colors of the light, e.g. blue light, do not support photosynthesis.
White light!!! :D
Light, water, carbon dioxide.
Because plants use light as their food, the more light, the more they'll grow.
Different shades, no, but different intensities will.
when are different intensities of light used in compound microscope
does the amount of light affect mold growth?
They respond best to Red and Blue
The light intensity knob is found on light microscopes and allows you to change the intensity of the light on the sample. Different light intensities allow you to view different parts more clearly.
the color of light does affect plants growth because the plant absorbs certain types of wavelengths of light
the color of light does affect plants growth because the plant absorbs certain types of wavelengths of light
say there was a pondweed in a beaker with tonnes of light and a sea slug was put in with it they will both survive due to photosynthesis. if a pondweed was in a beaker and had no light with a sea slug the sea slug will die because the plant can't photosynthesis and will respire
What light is best for green plantsYes, different colors will affect plant growth. If you are growing a green plant yourself either make sure your plant gets enough sunlight. Under green light your plant will not grow the best since green light will reflect on green plants, blue and red lights work more effectively in plant growth.
Gerald F. Gifford has written: 'The influence of growth media, temperatures, and light intensities on aspen root and top growth' -- subject(s): Aspen, Effect of light on, Effect of temperature on, Growth, Plant-soil relationships, Plants, Populus tremuloides