In the past it was shown with isolated Citrus aurantium L. cuticles that cuticular transpiration strongly increased with increasing temperatures. |
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The same cycle was found in plants transpiring in ambient conditions and where transpiration was greatly reduced. |
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With four stomachs, you're traveling scenic routes all the way through the highway transpiration system of scrumptiousness. |
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That run-off soaks through transpiration trenches, so it reduces the volume of water running off and also gives a filtration effect. |
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Then the other way is called transpiration, or water lost primarily from the leaves and stems of the plants. |
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The existence of apoplastic bypasses means that the extent of dilution of the solute by increasing transpiration flux is not always predictable. |
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Xylem flow carries the transpiration stream and is normally entirely acropetal. |
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Stomata are involved in two of the most important plant processes, photosynthesis and transpiration. |
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Likewise, efflux from the root symplasm to the transpiration stream must cross the plasma membrane of cells within the stele of the root. |
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Water use or evapotranspiration is composed of two parts, transpiration from the plant and evaporation from the soil surface. |
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Guard cell plasticity or, more exactly, plasticity in transpiration is clearly physiological plasticity. |
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In these stems and leaves with intercalary meristems, the upward transpiration stream clearly bypassed most of the enlarging cells. |
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While dry, the velamen may provide a barrier to water loss via transpiration from the wet, internal cells of the root. |
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Boundary layer conductance may also be lower with a more open crown, thus further increasing transpiration. |
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The human body usually emits heat by way of convection and radiation, and in hot weather the body has to dissipate perspiration by transpiration. |
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Leaf stomata control plant CO 2 absorption through photosynthesis and water loss through transpiration. |
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Water use efficiency also decreased while the rate of transpiration and stomatal conductance remained unchanged. |
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The transpiration was recorded from the weight change of the whole apparatus sitting on a balance. |
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On well-aerated soils, transpiration may play a vital role in supplying oxygen to xylem and inner cambial zones during the growing season. |
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According to president Ed Snodgrass, these plants provide maximum groundcover, water retention, erosion resistance, and respirative transpiration of moisture. |
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Some, but not all, are conveyed to shoots in the transpiration stream. |
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Canopy cover strongly suppressed the transpiration activity in the shoots. |
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In this study a new experimental technique was used that allowed the measurement of cuticular transpiration of isolated plant cuticles and leaf discs. |
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Assuming similar size-related differences in residual transpiration as described above, leaf cuticles of smaller plants may be even more efficient barriers for water loss. |
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In order to analyse the relevance of the epicuticular wax to the overall transpiration barrier, the epicuticular layer was selectively removed with gum arabic. |
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However, we know that withdrawal after alcohol addiction can be accompanied by copious transpiration. |
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Thus, effects of water stress on the plant are partly ameliorated by this improvement in water supply, and partly by the reduction in canopy size and transpiration. |
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This includes exploring climate control to lower transpiration rates in greenhouses and maximising the potential for recycling water. |
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To what extent this effect may be compensated at lower altitudes by plant transpiration is difficult to predict. |
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The combined process of evaporation from the earth's surface and transpiration from vegetation. |
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Cool temperatures will decrease the rate of plant transpiration which will reduce the movement of systemic herbicides into and within the plant. |
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This is the seasonal period when crops undergo rapid foliage expansion and substantial transpiration. |
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Evidence is presented here that CKs carried in the transpiration stream may be important mediators for the acclimation of plants to leaf canopy density. |
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Five minutes after she took the first capsule, her tongue and throat swelled, accompanied by transpiration, wheeziness, bowel complaints, and diarrhoea. |
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Differences in high-elevation transpiration rates between equatorial and middle-latitude mountains are greater at low lapse rates than at high ones. |
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Gale predicted and demonstrated a potential increase of transpiration with altitude when there is less than the average lapse rate of ambient temperature. |
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The effectiveness of these negentropic processes is further enhanced by most efficient entropy fluxes related to the transpiration and nocturnal respiration of plants. |
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The water loss the weed causes through transpiration is well above that of open water, causing reservoir and lake levels to drop faster than from evaporation. |
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Consequently, transpiration requires very little energy to be used by the plant. |
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These too are adapted to the low soil water content and have small, prickly leaves which reduce transpiration. |
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Tobgey, for his part, voiced Bhutan's readiness to use the SAARC observing members' capabilities, especially in transpiration and energy fields. |
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ProDrain also calculates crop transpiration. |
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The atmospheric moisture lost through precipitation is replenished by transpiration from vegetation, and by evaporation from the soil and from water bodies. |
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The water cycle consists of various complicated processes of precipitation, evaporation, interception, transpiration, infiltration, percolation, retention, detention, overland flow, throughflow, and runoff. |
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They used the transpiration of plants or movement of water in plants under the effects of micro gravity. |
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Second, since plant stomata open less widely under elevated atmospheric CO2 this reduces transpiration and suppresses the role of plants in the hydrological cycle. |
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The warmer winds cause the cedar to begin to transpire but the roots cannot obtain water from the frozen ground to replace the water lost through transpiration. |
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But water can also be invisible to human eyes, in the form of evaporation from the surface of oceans and land, and plant transpiration from the surfaces of leaves. |
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Plants use visible light for photosynthesis and infrared light to drive transpiration. |
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Second, they cause stomata to partly close, thereby reducing the water loss due to transpiration. |
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Solid particles, clogging the stomates of leaves or needles modify the transpiration rate and reduce the intensity of photosynthesis. |
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In conditions of high transpiration it is possible that Calcium is even transported out of the younger leaves causing necrotic areas due to lack of Calcium. |
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When a bamboo flowers, most of the leaves are replaced by flowers, transpiration stops, the plant lives on reserves and then all the culms die. |
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Choose newer shoots, remove the bottom leaves and cut the rest in half to reduce transpiration, then dip in rooting powder. |
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Living root cells passively absorb water in the absence of transpiration pull via osmosis creating root pressure. |
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Korean company Samsung expressed an interest in the projects relating to petrochemical industries and transpiration. |
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Heating phenomenon takes place in which local heating occurs due to evaporation, transpiration. |
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The movement of water out of the leaf stomata creates a transpiration pull or tension in the water column in the xylem vessels or tracheids. |
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Trees, largely due to transpiration process, help reduce the impact of temperature and these could be called lungs of urban areas, said the PHA official. |
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