Want this question answered?
"Fungus And mosses dont have true leaves, stems or roots." Fungi aren't plants... they are fungi. More closely related to animals than plants.
No, vinegar has a higher concentration of water than an egg. Therefore, if an egg is placed in vinegar, then it will gain mass because vinegar is hypotonic to the egg.
Transpiration is the evaporation of water from the aerial parts of plants including leaves, stems, and flowers. The mass flow of water from the roots to the leaves is driven partially by capillary action; however, it is primarily driven by water potential differences. Tall plants are also able to overcome gravity by decreasing the hydrostatic water pressure via the diffusion of water out of the stomata.
Planktivores eat plankton, which is a drifting mass of tiny plants (phytoplankton) and tiny animals (zooplankton) which are found in all natural bodies of water.
Jan van Helmont
Its water :) Good luck :)
From water(It was Jan Van Helmont not Jan Can Helmont)
if anything it would be reasonable to expect it to lose mass.
Plants gain mass by taking in nutrients from their roots. They gradually add more stem and leaves.
Eggs soaked in distilled water will gain mass and appear dramatically swollen. Eggs in dilute salt solutions will gain mass, and even those in very concentrated solutions might gain mass. Eggs buried in salt or other dry media should lose mass.
Increase of mass from water. Actually increase in mass is the result of increase in organic matter instead of water.
Temporarily by the mass of water drunk. This soon lost again.
i dont know figure it out yourself
a closed system will not gain or lose mass
depends on the salt content of the potato and how concentrated the salt is. the more salt there is in the water than the potato- the more water will exit the potato which then loses mass.
Yes, the hurricanes gain from mass a.k.a the sea water. This "mass" makes them stronger and stronger.
It is important for plants to transpire because the process of transpiration helps to cool the plant, maintain the osmotic pressure and enables the mass flow of mineral nutrients and water from roots to the shoots.