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Scientists flush out root cause of how trees lift waterDespite relying on trees to provide us with oxygen, lock away CO2, provide shade and even building materials and matchsticks we still didn't really know how trees manage to lift water, over a hundred metres, from their roots to the top of the canopy. Now scientists writing in Nature have taken a leaf out of the contact lens manufacturer's book and used the same material from which soft contact lenses are made to create an artificial tree.
As a result some of this negative pressure is also transferred to the roots, enabling a plant to pull water in from the soil and up the stem. This agrees with what biologists had long suspected might be going on but could never prove. The Cornell team suggest that apart from solving a long-standing mystery their work could also hold the key to the production of artificial trees that could efficiently extract clean water from deep underground to provide drinking supplies.
14th Sep 2008 |
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