Transport In Plants Flashcards
Why do multicellular plants need transport systems?
- Different areas of plant require certain molecules so they need to be delivered
- Plant continue to grow throughout their lives so they need to be able to move substances both up and down from the topmost leaves to the roots
- Plants overall have a relatively small SA:V and therefore cannot reply on diffusion alone as it will be too slow.
What materials do plants exchange and transport?
- CO2
- O2
- Water
- Organic nutrients
- Inorganic ions
- Auxins (plants growth)
What is photosynthesis?
Plants producing glucose through sunlight
Equation for photosynthesis
6CO2+6H2O=C6H12O6+6O2
What is a vascular bundle?
Collection of plant tissues used for transport found in the roots, stem and leaves of a plant, typically with the phloem on the outside and the xylem on the inside.
Where are the vascular bundles in the roots?
Found in the middle of the roots to help the plant withstand the tugging strains that results as the stems and leaves are blown in the wind.
Where are the vascular bundles in the stem?
Around the edge to give strength and support
Where are the vascular bundles in the leaves?
In the midrib of leaves, which provides support and has many small, branching veins spread through the leaf functioning in both transport and support.
What is the xylem made up of?
- Largely non-living tissue
- Made up of several types of dead cells
- Xylem vessels are the main structure, which are long, hollow structures made by several columns of cells fusing together.
What are the adaptions of xylem vessel?
- Non-lignified pit, which allows interconnection for lateral water flow around blockages
- Strengthened by lignin to provide structural support and prevent water loss
- No end cell wall, allowing water to flow uninterrupted
- Xylem parenchyma packed around vessel, which stores food and tannin (chemical that protects plant from attack by herbivores)
What is the phloem made up of?
-Made up of sieve tube elements, which are many cells joined end to end
What are the adaptions of phloem vessels?
- Non-lignified
- Have plasmodesmata linking cytoplasm of companion cell to thin cytoplasm of sieve tube element
- Perforated cell walls, called sieve plates that allows phloem contents to flow through
- Don’t have a nucleus or other major organelles
- Very thin layer of cytoplasm
How are root hair cells well adapted?
- Microscopic size
- Each microscopic hair has a large SA:V
- Each layer has thin diffusion pathway
- Conc. of solutes in cytoplasm of root hair cells maintain water potential gradients between soil water and cell
How does water move from the soil into the root hair cels?
Soil water has a very low concentration of solutes and therefore has a high water potentials. So it moves from the soil into the root hair cells down a water potential gradients by osmosis from an area of high wp to an area of low wp.
How does water move from the root hair cells to the xylem the SYMPLAST pathway?
- Water moves through the symplast, which is the continuous cytoplasm of living plant cells connected through plasmodesmata.
- Root hair cell has a higher water potential than the next cell a long
- Water will move from one root hair cell into the next by osmosis down a water potential gradient
- Process continues from cell to cell across root until xylem is reached
How does water move from the root hair cells to the xylem the APOPLAST pathway?
- Water moves across the apoplast, which is the intercellular spaces between the cell’s cell walls
- Water fills spaces between loose, open network of fibres in cellulose cell wall
- As water molecules move into the next cell, more water molecules are pulled through due to the cohesive forces between them
Water actually going into xylem?
- Water moves across root through apoplast and symplast pathways until it reaches the endodermis
- The endodermis has a waxy strip called the Casparian strip, made out of suberin which forces the water in the apoplast pathway to join the symplast pathway.
- Water potential of xylem cells is much lower than water potential of endodermal cells, so water moves by osmosis down a water potential gradient through the partially permeable membrane.
- Once inside the vascular bundle, water returns to the apoplast pathway to enter the xylem itself and move up the plant.
What is transpiration?
The inevitable loss of water through evaporation from the leaves during gaseous exchange.