Ch7 Mass transport Flashcards

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1
Q

Structure of xylem

A
  1. long hollow tube
  2. lignin wall
  3. lignin- strong waterproof and adhesive
  4. pits- lateral support
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2
Q

Movement of water into xylem

A
  1. water potential in xylem reduced by ions
  2. water enters xylem by osmosis
  3. down wpt gradient from xylem and surrounding cells
  4. across partially permeable membranes
  5. volume of water in xylem increase
  6. pressure increases and forces water upwards
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3
Q

Cohesion-tension theory

A
  1. loss of water at the leaves by transpiration
  2. transpiration pull - water moves via osmosis from top of xylem into leaf
  3. applies tension to column of water
  4. column of water moves up
  5. water particles stick together due to cohesion
  6. column doesn’t break because of adhesion with xylem walls
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4
Q

Movement of water out through stomata

A
  1. water vapour diffuse out through stomata
  2. down water potential gradient
  3. humidity atmosphere less than air spaces by stomata
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5
Q

Transpiration

A

The loss of water vapour through stomata by evaporation

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6
Q

Evidence for cohesion-tension

A
  1. change in diameter of tree trunk
  2. air bubble when xylem breaks
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7
Q

Diameter of tree trunk

A
  1. increased light during day
  2. increased rate of transpiration
  3. increased transpiration pull
  4. tension in xylem creates inward pull
  5. xylem vessels narrow
  6. due to adhesion of water molecules
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8
Q

Broken xylem

A
  1. air is drawn in due to tension
  2. air bubble breaks column of water
  3. water molecules no longer adhesive
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9
Q

Increased transpiration

A
  1. light- more stomata open for large SA
  2. temperature- higher kinetic energy
  3. wind- maintains concentration gradient
  4. less humidity- steeper concentration gradient
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10
Q

Adaptations of xerophyte

A
  1. thick waxy cuticle- waterproof
  2. sunken stomata, curled leaves- traps moist air to reduce concentration gradient
  3. densely packed spongy mesophyll- less air spaces
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11
Q

Translocation

A

Organic molecules are transported in the phloem from the source to the sink

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12
Q

Sucrose from source to sieve tube

A
  1. sucrose produced from photosynthesising cells
  2. facilitated diffusion down concentration gradient into companion cells
  3. H+ actively transported from companion cells into cell wall
  4. H+ diffuse down concentration gradient through co-transport proteins
  5. co-transport with sucrose into sieve tube
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13
Q

Mass flow of sucrose

A
  1. sucrose lowers water potential in sieve tube
  2. water moves via osmosis from xylem into sieve tube down water potential gradient
  3. creates high hydrostatic pressure
  4. sucrose diffuse into respiring tissue
  5. water diffuses into respiring tissue down wpt gradient
  6. mass flow down phloem down pressure gradient
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14
Q

Companion cell advantage

A
  1. produces ATP for active transport of H+
  2. repairs and maintains phloem
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15
Q

Sink

A

site where sugar is used (respiration) or stored for future use

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16
Q

Source

A

site of production of sugars during photosynthesis

17
Q

Evidence for mass transport

A
  1. concentration of sucrose is higher in leaves than roots
  2. downward phloem flow occurs only in daylight
  3. companion cells have lots of mitochondria
  4. increase in lead sucrose are followed by increase in phloem
  5. sap released due to pressure in sieve tube when cut
  6. metabolic poison/ no O2 stops translocation
18
Q

Clashing evidence of mass flow

A
  1. organic molecules move at same speed
  2. sieve plate function unclear (reduce rate of translocation)
  3. sucrose delivered at same rate to all regions(
19
Q

Ringing experiment observations

A
  1. ring of bark removed alongside phloem
  2. sugars of phloem accumulated above ring
  3. swelling
  4. death of tissue below region
  5. phloem responsible not xylem
20
Q

Mass transport experiments

A
  1. ringing
  2. tracer
  3. aphids
  4. cutting
21
Q
A