Submitted by ItsDivyamGupta t3_11bm82h in askscience
If plants grow , and they need water to grow. The water is absorbed by them in the growth stage and According to studies, they release about 95 percent of the water back into the Atmoshpere. My Question is , is the remaining 5 percent of water lost forever.
If it is lost forever , and as the process is going on from millions of years , then the water we have today is only a percent of water which earth had millions or maybe billions of years ago.
Couldn't find the answers on google and the answers I recieved from my professors were unsatisfying to me.
CrustalTrudger t1_j9yrdg2 wrote
While a plant is alive, it is taking up water. Some of that water is stored in the plant itself and the rest is returned to the atmosphere via transpiration. When a plant dies, whatever water that is stored within the plant itself is going to be (1) returned to the atmosphere directly via evaporation as the plant biomass breaks down, (2) consumed by an organism eating the plant biomass, or (3) buried and contribute to soil moisture (or some mixture thereof). None of this water is "lost", though it may be transferred to a different part of the hydrologic cycle.