Water transport in plants Flashcards
Transport systems in plants
No circulatory system
Locations of phloem and xylem in stem and root
Phloem, xylem, big circle to support plant
Phloem, xylem, small circle to resist pulling forces
Water transport in plants
Used for photosynthesis, turgor, rest evaporates
Transpiration, leave evaporation
Movement through roots
Symplast pathway
Apoplast pathway
Symplast pathway
Water absorbed into RHC, osmosis, decreased WP in root
Diffuses from epidermis through roots to xylem down potential gradient
Cytoplasm in root connected by plasmodesmata through cell wall holes, no further membranes to cross until water reaches xylem, no more osmosis
Apoplast pathway
Thick and open cell walls, water diffuses through cell walls
Do not cross membranes by osmosis
Pathway stops at endodermis due to waterproof casparian strip, seals cell walls
Enters symplast pathway
Plant has some control over xylem, water uptake
Movement of water into xylem
Active transport of salts with endodermal cells into xylem, along carrier proteins
Decrease in WP, osmosis along pot grad, water moves in
Transpiration
Water moves through plants from high WP in soil to low WP in air
Transpiration provides force that pulls water up xylem
Explained by cohesion tension theory
Movement through stem
Xylem structure
Composed of dead cells joined together = tubes, no osmosis
Lignin cell wall, laid down in helices, strengthen vessels, do not collapse under pressure
Make woody stems strong
Continuous pipes from root to leaves
Driving movements, transpiration
Cohesion tension theory
Water evaporates from mesophyll cell in leaf into air spaces, reduce WP in cells by xylem
Water enters cells from xylem by osmosis
More water molecules drawn up as result of cohesion
Water pulled by xylem due to transpiration
Transpiration put water column under tension
Water adheres to xylem walls
Water column under tension by evaporation from leaves
Strong lignin walls stop collapse under suction pressure
Shrink slightly during day, transpiration at max
Movement through leaves
Xylem vessels form leaf veins
Water diffuses from xylem in veins through adjacent cells, lower WP
Symplast pathway through living cytoplasm
Apoplast pathway through non living cell walls
Water evaporates from spongy cels into sub stomata air space, diffuse out through stomata
Endothermic evaporation by solar energy
Factors affecting transpiration
Light
Temperature
Air movement
Humidity
Potometer equation
Rate of uptake = air bubble speed x cross section area of capillary tube
How does a potometer work?
Measures rate of uptake by cut stem
Water used in turgor and photosynthesis
During day, more transpiration and wilt
During night, less transpiration, turgid
Effect of light on rate of transpiration
Stimulate stomata open for gas exchange, photosynthesis, increase rate
Wilt with net water loss