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ACID RAIN HOW DOES ACID RAIN AFFECT SEEDS AND PLANTS?
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Once upon a time ONCE UPON A TIME... … 8C got a task: They were to investigate how acid rain affects cutlings and seeds. The students worked and worked…
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Experiment setup … and finally the setup of the experiment was ready: Three different ”rain waters” were made: 1. plain, neutral water 2. acid rain at pH 5 3. really acid rain at pH 4 Cutlings of a garden plant, ”Painted nettle” (Solenostemon scutellarioides), were put in the three different ”rain waters” and left for a week. There were three groups of students doing the same experiments.
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A week later all the nettles in neutral water were alive and well.
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At pH 5 the results were not that good – one nettle did quite well, one wasn’t that ok anymore and one had almost given up. Was there perhaps a slight pH difference between the three separate experiments at pH 5?
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And what had happened in the pH 4 ”acid rain” jars? Well… not much left of those nettles, is there?
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Alfalfa seeds were sown on soil and watered with the same three ”rain waters” as earlier, namely not treated water as well as ”acid rain” at pH 5 and at pH 4. After a week the results were checked. Then we had the seed experiments.
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Clean water – wonderful for growing alfalfa sprouts! (The cup with less sprouts in the picture just had less seeds in it from the beginning.)
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pH 5 still works fine, alfalfa is apparently not very sensitive to pH.
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BUT… don’t use very acidic rain water if you want sprouts, pH 4 will not give you much of a harvest! Conclusions: Acid rain does harm seeds as well as plants by either restricting the growth or killing the plant. Some species are more sensitive to low pH than others.
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