How do plants obtain the oxygen required for respiration at night when photosynthesis is not occurring?
They store oxygen produced during the day
They switch to anaerobic respiration
Through lenticels and diffusion from air spaces within the plant
They do not respire at night
Related Questions
Which process is NOT directly involved in the gaseous exchange required for respiration in plants?
Diffusion
Stomatal opening and closing
Transpiration
Lenticular transpiration
Plants does not need specialised respiratory organ because
Each plant part takes care of its own gas exchange needs
Plants do not need great demands for gas exchange
Both (a) and (b)
None of the above
A researcher observes that a plant placed in a sealed chamber shows a net decrease in CO2 levels during the day but a net increase at night. What can be inferred about the metabolic processes occurring?
The plant is only respiring, both day and night.
The plant is only photosynthesizing, both day and night.
Photosynthesis exceeds respiration during the day, while respiration exceeds photosynthesis at night.
Respiration exceeds photosynthesis during the day, while photosynthesis exceeds respiration at night.
Seeds respire in
Oxygen
Nitrogen
Carbon Dioxide
Hydrogen
The primary structure for gas exchange in leaves is:
Cuticle
Epidermis
Stomata
Vascular bundles
Do plants respire at night?
Yes
No
Only during the day
Only when they are not photosynthesizing
Which of the following statements BEST describes the relationship between photosynthesis and respiration in plants at night?
Photosynthesis and respiration both cease, maintaining a neutral balance of gases.
Photosynthesis continues at a reduced rate, while respiration increases to compensate.
Photosynthesis ceases, and respiration also ceases to conserve energy.
Photosynthesis ceases, and respiration continues, consuming stored organic molecules and releasing CO2.
The compensation point in plants is reached when...
Photosynthesis ceases entirely, and only respiration occurs.
The rate of photosynthesis equals the rate of respiration, resulting in no net gas exchange.
Respiration ceases entirely, and only photosynthesis occurs.
The plant switches from C3 to CAM photosynthesis.
If a plant's respiration rate significantly exceeds its photosynthetic rate for a prolonged period, what is the MOST likely consequence?
Increased growth and biomass
Enhanced fruit and seed production
Accumulation of starch in storage organs
Depletion of stored carbohydrates and eventual plant death
Through which tiny pores on leaves do plants exchange gases for respiration?
Xylem
Phloem
Stomata
Root hairs