Osmosis For Plants ✭

Osmosis isn’t just a biology term—it’s how your plants eat, drink, and stand up tall. Here’s the simple breakdown:

Plants don’t have a heart to pump water. So how does water get from soil to leaves?

Here’s a social media post tailored for a platform like Instagram, Twitter, or Facebook, depending on your audience (gardeners, students, or general science fans). osmosis for plants

Water naturally moves from low-solute (soil) → high-solute (root cells). That flow creates root pressure—enough to push water up stems without a pump.

PSA: Your plant isn't "thirsty." It’s waiting for osmosis to work. 💦 Osmosis isn’t just a biology term—it’s how your

Science makes gardening make sense. 🌿

Water moves into roots automatically when soil has less salt/sugar than the root cells. Once inside, pressure builds = leaves go from 🥀 to 🌿. Here’s a social media post tailored for a

Overwater? Roots can’t breathe. Underwater? No gradient. Balance is everything.