No, beans have a low tolerance to salt.
telanthera osiris
YES EVEN IF YOU PUT JUST SULT IT WILL DIE
The higher the salt concentration the more water that is drawn from the bean. The lower the salt concentration the more the bean will expand.
Bean plants grow in loam soil. Salt wouldn't do anything.
No, addition of table salt (NaCl) to water used for watering plants will normally kill the plant.
Water will make the bean sprout. Both salt water and baby oil will hinder or halt the bean sprouting.
table salt
Well, it sounds like a good science project. All plants can tolerate a little salt, since salt is ubiquitous. Most plants can't tolerate much. There have been experiments to raise the salt tolerance of some agricultural plants. The white-leaved salt bush found in the Southwestern US uses salt to protect its leaves from excess sunlight. Now if you could make peanuts that tolerate salt well, you'll make a fortune. Self-salting peanuts!
Some seeds (mangrove and coconut) can. But in most cases the presence of salt causes moisture in a plant to come out of the plant (by osmosis) and this means that the seed/plant can not grow in a salty environment unless it has special adaptations for dealing with salt.
A bean is mostly made out of fresh water. Fresh water is less dense than salt water. Hence, the bean floats.
salt water!?
the salt content in the water when mixes with the soil or when it deposits on the foliage it will not allow the plant to get enough breathing gas(co2),thus the plants are killed. only few plants which can tolerate the saline soil can survive in coastal regions.