Quote:
Originally Posted by orchidsarefun
Water is H2O. Roots generally green up when watered and I've noticed they green up extensively when exposed to soaking rains. Aren't they absorbing oxygen via the water? Soaking - for +-10 mins, not overnight, is similar to soaking rains? When the pot is removed from the soaking, the water in the pot is replaced with air. As the roots and bark dry, more air is introduced? The same would apply to any media?
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Not disputing any of that, but I don't think it provides anything over normal air exchange through the spaces between medium in pots. Plants (and other forms of life) take in oxygen to the extent they are metabolizing sugars or fats. There is nowhere to store excess oxygen in an organism. They only take up what they are using.
Humans carry only about 4 minutes' worth of oxygen in our blood, which is why we can't hold our breath very long. A normal human breathing supplemental oxygen anywhere near sea level, as you see athletes doing on television, gets no benefit at all. Oxygen bars are fun experiences only, and provide no benefit. The blood of a person with normal lungs and heart breathing air at sea level is already fully saturated with oxygen and it isn't possible to pack it with any more. Plants are in the same situation with regards to oxygen.