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Re: Precipitationin the form of dew in the warmer months and frost [#permalink]
Can someone please explain how option B is correct in question 1? Not able to understand the explanation given above
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Re: Precipitationin the form of dew in the warmer months and frost [#permalink]
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Precipitation—in the form of dew in the warmer months and frost in the colder ones—often forms on grass and leaves during the night. But since this precipitation results from a change between surface and atmospheric temperatures, how can similar water droplets also appear on some houseplants? The answer is that some globules are the result of guttation. Occurring only in vascular plants, guttation begins when water moves from saturated soil into drier plant roots. Water accumulation in roots creates pressure, which, in daytime, is offset through evaporation. At night, however, these plants use the pipe-like elements of their tissue to draw the excess water upwards and push it out the tips of their leaves.

1) We have the dew
2) then we have a question: how can similar water droplets also appear on some houseplants?
3) then we have however, these plants use the pipe-like elements of their tissue to draw the excess water upwards and push it out the tips of their leaves.


From this we do not know for sure if the droplets are from dew completely or from guttation. We do have rooms for doubts

B is also correct
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