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photosynthesise การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • For a plant to grow, it must photosynthesise more than it respires.
  • By the way, not all bacteria photosynthesise.
  • Symbionts able to tolerate warmer water seem to photosynthesise more slowly, implying an evolutionary trade-off.
  • This sedimentary input stimulates biotic activity in the surface layers, in which organisms photosynthesise under aerobic conditions.
  • In carnivorous plants, the leaf is not just used to photosynthesise, but also as a trap.
  • Then some bacteria developed the ability of green plants to photosynthesise or manufacture food with the help of sunlight.
  • Organisms such as dinoflagellate have mobility, the ability to take in solid food, and the ability to photosynthesise.
  • Most of the Viscaceae bear evergreen leaves that photosynthesise effectively, and photosynthesis proceeds within their green, fleshy stems as well.
  • Rhodophytic algae contain rhodoplasts, which are red chloroplasts that allow the algae to photosynthesise to a depth of up to 268 m.
  • Increases in atmospheric CO 2 concentration affect how plants photosynthesise, resulting in increases in plant water use efficiency, enhanced photosynthetic capacity and increased growth.
  • Although moss and hornwort sporophytes can photosynthesise, they require additional photosynthate from the gametophyte to sustain growth and spore development and depend on it for supply of water, mineral nutrients and nitrogen.
  • As this has come up though, I have to mention " Elysia chlorotica "-the sea slug that does photosynthesise . talk ) 10 : 41, 9 January 2012 ( UTC)
  • This species is characterised by producing quite floppy pitchers in spring with large wings, perhaps as a method of producing a large surface area of tissue in order to rapidly photosynthesise at the start of the year.
  • Algal zooxanthellae of the genus " Symbiodinium " derived from the food of these animals continue to photosynthesise inside the body and give rise to brown and green pigments . " Symbiodinium ", together with the nematocysts, are presumed to be derived from coelenterate prey.
  • This is because they live in dry ( including cold ) or nutrient-poor habitats where they are only able to photosynthesise very slowly, so to end up with a positive carbon gain over the lifetime of the leaf, they need to be kept for a long time.
  • This phenology is thought to allow " S . amara " to photosynthesise most effectively, since the new leaves are more efficient than those they replace . in Costa Rica, growth rates as fast as 18 mm per year have been recorded, and the stem grows constantly throughout the year.
  • If scientists had chosen some new term ( " photoplant " say ) to denote the organisms that photosynthesise and that are therefore not animals or fungi-and chosen to use the word " plant " to informally encompass both fungi and'photoplants'( as most non-scientists would certainly do ) then this question would never have arisen.
  • The benefits of mycorrhizal relations to their plant partners are not limited to nutrients, but can be essential for plant reproduction : In situations where little light is able to reach the forest floor, such as the North American pine forests, a young seedling cannot obtain sufficient light to photosynthesise for itself and will not grow properly in a sterile soil.