None, because there is no such thing as a worss.
Bigger the SA:V ratio , transpiration sucks.
Transpiration regulates how much water moves through the plant. In hot dry air, more water will evaporate out of the stomates resulting in a higher transpiration rate. Light, or temperature, can therefore increase transpiration. Wind will evaporate more water from the leaf's boundary layer resulting in a higher transpiration rate. Humidity or moisture will lower transpiration because less water will evaporate out of the stomates.
Under the humid condition the rate of transpiration decreased, this is due to the fact that the water potential of the air surrounding the leaf was increased by the mist, this in turn minimized the gradient of water potential between the leaf and its surrounding environment, thus the process of transpiration lessened to some extent. This occurred because the rate of transpiration decreases proportionally to the amount of humidity in the air. Under windy conditions the rate of transpiration showed an increase, this is due to the fact that wind removes water vapor from the leaf's surrounding, resulting in a broader concentration difference between the leaf and its outer environment, therefore the leaf possessed a higher water potential as compared to its outside environment, and a more rapid loss of water occurred through the stomata.
1st Form- Liquid to gas evaporation 2nd Form- Transpiration (From a plant's leaves to the atmosphere) 3rd Form- Sublimation (From a solid to a gas)
three if the question was How many 1/3 make a whole
Transpiration
Evaporation of water through the plant's leaves is called transpiration.
This process is called transpiration.
This phenomenon is called transpiration.
osmosis or The Water Cycle: Transpiration- evaporation from the leaves of plants
The process of leaves giving off water vapor is transpiration.
transpiration
cuticular transpiration occurs through the cuticle while the stomatal transpiration occurs through the stomata.
This phenomenon is called transpiration.
It is called transporation
Transpiration. During the day, water is constantly evaporating from the plant, mainly through leaf stomata. The large amount of water lost from the plant is a result of the plant's need to obtain carbon dioxide from the air.
When water is released from leaves and evaporates it is called transpiration.