Asked by casyen

Recall what you know about hypertonic, hypotonic, and isotonic solutions. When an environment is hypotonic, what happens to the cell?(1 point)
Responses

The cell has more solute, so solvent moves from inside the cell to outside, causing the cell to shrink.
The cell has more solute, so solvent moves from inside the cell to outside, causing the cell to shrink.

The environment has more solute, so solvent moves from inside the cell to outside, causing the cell to shrink.
The environment has more solute, so solvent moves from inside the cell to outside, causing the cell to shrink.

The environment has more solute, so solvent moves from outside the cell to inside, causing the cell to swell.
The environment has more solute, so solvent moves from outside the cell to inside, causing the cell to swell.

The cell has more solute, so solvent moves from outside the cell to inside, causing the cell to swell.
The cell has more solute, so solvent moves from outside the cell to inside, c

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
"The cell has more solute, so solvent moves from outside the cell to inside, causing the cell to swell."

Explanation: A hypotonic environment has lower solute (higher water) than the cell, so water flows into the cell by osmosis, making it swell (and possibly burst in animal cells).