Chapter 8: Transport in plants Flashcards
why do plants have branching shapes?
due to it giving them a larger surface area in relation to their volume. It means that most of their cells are close to the surface.
xylem
a plant tissue made up of dead empty cells joined end to end; it transports water and mineral ions and helps support the plant.
They don’t contain any cytoplasm or nuclei, their walls are made of cellulose and lignin. Lignin is very strong and helps keep the plants upright. (mechanical support).
phloem
a plant tissue made up of living cells joined end to end; it transports substances made by the plant such as sucrose and amino acids. Contains cytoplasm but no nuclei.
Activity controlled by th companion cells.
Pits
They have small holes on their sides called pits where water can enter and move from one vessel to another.
Sieve plates
Walls that have partially broken down to form sieve plates in phloem tubes.
adaptations of xylem: the cells are dead with no contents
water can flow easily through a tube
lignin
a hard string waterproof substance that forms the walls of the xylem vessels.
In leaves, the xylem vessels in the vascular bundle help the leaf to be held flat to provide a large surface area to absorb sunlight.
adaptations of xylem: there are no cross walls between the dead cells
there is a continuous tube for water to flow through all the way from the roots to the leaves.
adaptations of xylem: the walls of the vessels contain lignin
lignin is solid and makes sure the vessels are open and do not collapse allowing the water to flow through easily.
adaptations of xylem: the diameter of the vessels is between about 15 micrometres and 200 micrometres
this is narrow enough to make sure the column of water inside them does not break: but wide enough to allow a lot of water to flow through.
RHC
at the very tip is a protective cap to protect the root it grows through the soil. The rest of the roots are covered by a layer of cells called the epidermis. The root hairs are formed from some of the cells in the epidermis.
each root hair is a long epidermal cell. Root hairs do not live for a very long. As the root grows they get damaged by the soil particles and are replaced by new ones.
the function of the RHC
Is to absorbs water and minerals in the form of the soil. We have seen that water moves into a root hai by osmosis.
the pathway of water through to the plant
As cytoplasm and cell sap inside the r0oot hair are quite concentrated solutions. The water in the soil is normally a more dilute solution. Water therefore diffuses into the root hair down its concentration gradient through the partially permeable cell surface membrane. The long thin root hairs have a large surface area which increases the uptake of water and minerals ions.
the pathway of water through to the plant (2)
-water is drawn up the xylem to replace water in the leaf due to water loss. This creates a respiration stream.
-water enters the root hair cell through osmosis down concentration gradient as the soil water has water potential to the root hair cell sap.
-water crosses the living cells of the cortex through-
osmosis through the cells
pulled by transportation through freely permeable membrane cell walls (in between cells).
-Near the center of the root a layer of cells with a waxy cell wall that prevents water, from moving through the cell wall forcing all water to go through the living cells to enter the xylem vessels.
-This allows the cell membrane to control substances that enter the xylem.
transpiration
-water in the mesophyll cell from a thin layer of moisture on their surfaces(this helps with diffusion of CO2 in the cells).
-The water evaporates from the large surface areas of the spongy mesophyll cells into airspace, this creates a high concentration of water molecules in air spaces inside and low outside.
-water vapour diffuses down the concentration gradient of one of the leaves into the surrounding air through the opened stomata.
-Water cannot diffuse into the leaf due to the air spaces being too saturated with water vapour. This must be absorbed from the soil and drawn up the plant.