Plant Transport Flashcards
What do plants need to transport?
- water and mineral ions : from soil via roots to all cells using the xylem
- co2: during daylight from air or water
- o2: for respiration
- assimilates : not all plants photosynthesis to produce glucose so they need the phloem to transport sucrose and amino acids
- plant hormones
Vascular tissue distribution in young roots
- Xylem : transport of inorganic ions and water
- Phloem : Transport of assimilates
- Endodermis : Sheath of cells surrounding the vascular bundle - has a key role in getting water into xylem vessels
- Pericycle : Layer of meristem cells - undifferentiated cells able to divide for new growth of tissues
Vascular tissue distribution in young stems
- Xylem : transport of inorganic ions and water
- Phloem : Transport of assimilates
- Cambium : Layer of meristem cells - undifferentiated cells unable to divide for new growth of tissues = xylem + phloem
- Parenchyma : Packing and support tissue capable of cell division
- Collenchyma - Cells divide structural support in growing shoots and leaves
Vascular tissue distribution in leaves
- The vasculkar bundles form from the midrib ( main vein) and side veins of the leaf
- The branching net work of veins spreading throughtout of the leaf veins support the leaf as well as as transporting substances to and from the leaf cells
- Within each vein the xylem is above the phloem
- The palisade and mesophyll cells are adapted for photosythesis and air spaces for diffusion
Structure of xylem tissue
- Xylem vessels : columns of fused hollow ( dead) cells which transport the water and mineral ions up the plant
- Fibres : long dead cells with thick cell walls which provide support
- Xylem parenchyma : living cells forms packing tissue and stores food . May contain bitter tasting tannin to protect against insect attacks
Structure of the xylem tissue
- Starts at column of live cells which lay down, waterproof lignin inside the cell walls
- Cell contents die and cell wall breaks down
- Without the plates long vessel elements are formed lignin increases as cell wall ages. It is arranged in spirals annular or reticular patterns.
- These are gaps in the lignin where there is only cellulose these are called pits
Adaptions of xylem vessels to functions
- Continuos column
- No contents or end walls to impede walls
- Lignin prevents walls from collapsing inwards due to tension
- Diameter most effective for flow - small enough to maintain water column for capillary action
- Lignin allows for adhesion for water molecules
- Pits allow sideways movement ins and out of vessels
- Arrangement og lignin allows plant to grow bend and branch
Why do plants need a transport system?
- Plants are multicelullar so not all cells will be in direct contact with their environment
- Substances need to be transported to all cells to allow metabolic reactions to occur and waste products need to be removed
- Plants can continue growing throughtout their lives which means that they can be very large . This means that substances such as water and minerals may be transported a long distance from the soil to their leaves
Structure of phloem tissue
- Sieve tube elements : Columns of cells that transport the assimlates
- Companion cells : linked to sieve tubes , contain dense cytoplasm and carry out the metabloic reactions required transport
- Parenchyma : Packing cells
- Fibres : Thick lignin walls, dead hollow for support , narrow and long
- Sclerieids : Ligninfied paranchyma cells th at provides rigidity and support
Sieve elements
- Liquid within phloem sap
- Thin layer of cytoplam contain mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum
- No nucleus or ribosomes
- End cells walls are pertorated formning sieve plates
- 10-15 um in width
- usually 5-6 sided cross section
Companion cells
- linked to sieve elements by plasmodesmata
- Have dense cytoplasm with large molecules
- More mitochandria and ribosomes than normal
Water transport rin multicellular plants
- Water vapour diffuses out of the stomata
- Water evaporates from mesophyll cell walls
- Tension pulls water from the veins into the apoplast of the mesophyll cells air gaps
- Tension pulls the water column upwards and outward in the xylem veins in the leaves
- Tension pulls the water column upwatds in the the xylem of the root and stem
- Water molecules form a cohesive column from the roots to the leaves
- Water moves into the stele by osmosis
Water potential
- The tendency of water to move in or out of a solution
- The more solute in a solution the lower the water potential
- Water moves from a higher water potential to a lower water potential
Cells in high and low water potential
High water potential
* When the cell is placed in water solution where the water potential is higher outisde the cell then inside the cell. Water moves via osmosis through a partially permeable membrane . This causes the cell to swell , grow in size and increase the volume of the cytoplasm. This makes the cell become turgid and increase turgor pressure.
Low water potential
* When the cell is placed in water potential is highter inside the cell then outside the cell. Water moves out the cell by osmosis through a partially permeable membrane this causes the cytoplasm to pull away from the cell wall and become incipant plasmadoysed then plasmadoysed
Water and mineral ions uptake from the soil
- The epidermis has root hair cells which increase the roots the SA and absorb water and mineral ions
- These minerals are absorbed by active transport
- These minerals together with sugars and amino acids lower the water potential of the cytoplasm and vacuolar sap
- Water moves in by osmosis
Movement of water into the root
- Soil water has a low conentration of dissolved minerals so a very high water potential
- The cytoplasm and the vacuolar sapof the root hair cell contains many solutes so the water is lower
- Water moves into the root hair cell by osmosis down the water potential gradient
- The cell becomes turgid
- The adjacent cell will have a lower water potential than the root hair cell
- Water will continue moving from cell to cell by osmosis
Pathways - Movement of water across the root
Apoplast pathway
- The cellulose cell wall is fully permeable
- Water moves through gaps in the cellulose cell walls (adhesion)
- Dissolved mineral ions are carried with the water
- It does not pas through the cell membrane ( not osmosis )
- Thw water moving up the xylem together with the cohesion between water molecules means there is a continous flow
- The open structure of cellulose offers little resistance to the flow
- Hwever the apoplast pathway stops at the endodermis
Pathways - Movement of water across the root
The symplast pathway
- Water travels through the cytoplasm of cellsy
- The cytoplasm’s of the cells in the root are connected by plasmodesmata through holes in the cell walls
- The plasmodesmata are composed of a thin strands of cytoplasm
Pathways - Movement of water across the root
The vacuolar pathway
- Very similar to the symplast pathway
- The pathway which water takes is not confined the cytoplasm
- Water can travel through the vacuoles
Pathways - Movement of water across the root
The casparian strip
- Cells in the endodermis contain a band of waterproof meterial called the casparian strip
- This is made from suberin
- The strip blocks the apoplast pathway and forces water into cells via the symplast pathway
- Transport proteins in the cell surface membrane which is slectively permeable
- Transport proteins in the cell surface carry out active transport to move mineral ions into the cytoplasm
- Lowering the water potential mwans water will enter the xylem by osmosis.
- Once water has enterned the xlem it cannot pass back into the cortex as the apoplast pathway is blocked
Root pressure
- Mineral ions are actively transported into the xylem vessels at the roots
- This lowers the water potential , causing water to enter by osmosis and forces water up the stem
- Root pressure will be affected by metabolic poisons, temperature and oxygen concentration
- This actions only moves water a small distance
Transpiratioin pull
- Water molecules are attacted to each other by cohesive forces
- This forms a long column of water in the xylem
- As water is lost at the top by transpiration , the column is pulled through the xylem
- The pull of water creates a tension in the column.The lignin prevents the xylem from collapsing inwards with this tension - evidence for this is that the diameter of the tree trunck decreases in the day
- If a column is broken , water can flow into adjacent xylem vessels via pits
- This called the cohesion theory