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Why do roots grow downward?

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Answer: Gravity guides root growth

Gravity guides root growthCorrect! Roots exhibit gravitropism (response to gravity). Special cells in root caps contain starch-filled organelles (statoliths) that settle downward due to gravity. This triggers auxin redistribution, causing cells on the upper side to elongate faster, bending the root downward. This ensures roots find water and anchor the plant!

Water pulls roots downWrong. While roots do seek water (hydrotropism), downward growth is primarily controlled by gravity response (gravitropism), not water pulling.

Soil pushes roots deeperWrong. Soil doesn't push roots—roots actively grow downward following gravity signals detected by statolith cells in root caps.

Go deeper: Gravitropism · Statoliths · Auxin
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