More likely than not it would be a different color. In space there is no light, the chloroplasts in the plant wouldn’t be able to make sugars nor would photosynthesis occur, if we’re speaking hypothetically, the plant would
most likely stay small, it would probably take up and grow until it couldn’t anymore, that is if it survived.
<em>Answer:</em>
<em>Photosynthetic cells contain chlorophyll and other light-sensitive pigments that capture solar energy. In the presence of carbon dioxide, such cells are able to convert this solar energy into energy-rich organic molecules, such as glucose.</em>
<span>The biosphere is simply "life on Earth"—the sum total, that is, of all living things on Earth. Yet the whole is more than the sum of the parts: not only is the biosphere an integrated system whose many components fit together in complex ways, but it also works, in turn, in concert with the other major earth systems. These and many other interactions make it easy to see why scientists speak of Earth as a system—and why some go even further and call it a living thing.
1.) </span><span>plants (biosphere) grow in the ground (geosphere)
2.) </span><span>The geosphere alone accounts for almost 82% of the combined mass of the four subsystems.</span>
B) it will starve
happy thanksgiving : )