transpiration
[ tran-spuh-rey-shuh n ]
/ ˌtræn spəˈreɪ ʃən /
noun
an action or instance of transpiring.
Botany.
the passage of water through a plant from the roots through the vascular system to the atmosphere.
Origin of transpiration
WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH transpiration
evanescence evaporation liquefaction melting thawing transpiration vaporizationWords nearby transpiration
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transplantation
Example sentences from the Web for transpiration
Medical definitions for transpiration
transpiration
[ trăn′spə-rā′shən ]
n.
The passage of watery vapor through the skin or through any membrane or pore.
Scientific definitions for transpiration
transpiration
[ trăn′spə-rā′shən ]
The process of giving off vapor containing water and waste products, especially through the stomata on leaves or the pores of the skin.
A Closer Look
Plants need much more water than animals do. But why? Plants use water not only to carry nutrients throughout their tissues, but also to exchange gases with the air in the process known as transpiration. Air, which contains the carbon dioxide that plant cells need for photosynthesis, enters the plant mainly through the stomata (tiny holes under its leaves). The air travels through tiny spaces in the leaf tissue to the cells that conduct photosynthesis. These cells are coated with a thin layer of water. The cell walls do not permit gases to pass through them, but the carbon dioxide can move across the cell walls by dissolving in the water on their surface. The cells remove the carbon dioxide from the water and use the same water to carry out oxygen, the main waste product of photosynthesis. All this mixing of water and air in transpiration, though, has one drawback: more than 90 percent of the water that a plant's roots suck up is lost by evaporation through the stomata. This is why a plant always needs water and why plants that live in dry climates, such as cacti, have reduced leaf surfaces from which less water can escape.