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What happens if plants are grown under high atmospheric pressure?

If, say, pour into a jar of land, sow wheat grains, and then close the jar and pump air, will this somehow affect growth? If the pressure is doubled, tripled, etc. .... The gas concentration is higher, will plants grow faster, or can they grow larger?
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with increasing pressure ... the tree should grow faster and more at first ... because the forced absorption of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere increases ... then, since the plant under the hood, then CO2 is quickly spent ... and the tree grows slowly again ... so it is necessary to constantly inject CO2 ... but I think the growth of plants depends more on nutrients ... light ... humidity ... heat ... although it is interesting to experiment with pressure ... the Japanese can see these trees were starving ... or cold ... At the highlands of the Carpathians ... when I was on Goverla ... at an altitude of 1700 m and ut ... bonsai trees is not only above the grass ... here it is .... in the cold on the tops of the winter is long and the short summer ... there are also smaller pressure ...
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Found a very interesting material about this

The Japanese have a national tradition (bonsai): on the windowsills, under a hood with rarefied air (where the atmospheric pressure is about 0.1 atmosphere), grow small trees (oaks, pines, poplars, birches, etc.) that have dimensions herbs.As a fact, it is a directly proportional dependence of plant growth height on atmospheric pressure. With increasing / decreasing atmospheric pressure, absolute growth proportionally increases / decreases! This can serve as an experimental proof of why the trees after the catastrophe became herbs. And plant giants, having a height of 150 to 2000 meters, either completely died out, or decreased to 15-20 meters.


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