introduction to plant transport · of the roots helps the plant? a. the plant gets its support from...

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The algal ancestors of plants were completely immersed in water and dissolved minerals. The adaptation to land involved the differentiation of the plant body into roots, which absorb water and minerals from the soil, and stems which are exposed to light and atmospheric CO 2 . This morphological solution created a new problem: the need to transport materials between roots and shoots. Roots and shoots are bridged by vascular tissues that transport water and sap throughout the plant body. Introduction to Plant Transport Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

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• The algal ancestors of plants were completely immersed in

water and dissolved minerals.

• The adaptation to land involved the differentiation of the

plant body into roots, which absorb water and minerals from

the soil, and stems which are exposed to light and

atmospheric CO2.

• This morphological solution created a new problem: the need

to transport materials between roots and shoots.

• Roots and shoots are bridged by vascular tissues that

transport water and sap throughout the plant body.

Introduction to Plant Transport

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Items referring to

physiological processes

are limited to

photosynthesis, cellular

respiration, transpiration,

growth, and reproduction.

• Transport in plants occurs on three levels:

(1) the uptake and loss of water and solutes by individual

cells

(2) short-distance transport

of substances from cell to

cell at the level of tissues

or organs

(3) long-distance transport

of sap within xylem and

phloem at the level of

the whole plant.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 36.1

Know these for the EOC

• Roots, stems, leaves

• Flowers, fruits, cones

• Meristem, cambium, ground, dermal, vascular,

xylem, phloem

• Stomata, guard cells, seeds

• Diffusion in a solution is fairly efficient for transport

over distances of cellular dimensions (less than 100

microns).

• However, diffusion is much too slow for long-

distance transport within a plant - for example, the

movement of water and minerals from roots to

leaves.

7. Bulk flow functions in long-distance

transport

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

• Water and mineral salts from soil enter the plant

through the epidermis (dermal tissue) of roots,

cross the root cortex, pass into the stele, and then

flow up xylem vessels to the shoot system.

Introduction to Absorption by Roots

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

• In most land plants, the epidermis of leaves and

other aerial parts is coated with a cuticle of

polyesters and waxes.

• The cuticle protects the plant from microbial attack.

• The wax acts as

waterproofing to

prevent excessive

water loss.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 29.10

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 36.7

• Xylem sap flows upward to veins that branch

throughout each leaf, providing each with water.

• Plants lose an astonishing amount of water by

transpiration, the loss of water vapor from leaves

and other aerial parts of the plant.

• An average-sized maple tree losses more than 200 L of

water per hour during the summer.

• The flow of water transported up from the xylem

replaces the water lost in transpiration and also

carries minerals to the shoot system.

Introduction to Xylem Transport

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

The water lost via the stomata is

replaced by water pulled out of the leaf

xylem. watch

• The transpirational pull on xylem sap is

transmitted all the way from the leaves to the root

tips and even into the soil solution.

• Cohesion of water due to hydrogen bonding makes it

possible to pull a column of sap from above without the

water separating.

• Helping to fight gravity is the strong adhesion of water

molecules to the hydrophilic walls of the xylem cells.

• The very small diameter of the tracheids and vessel

elements exposes a large proportion of the water to the

hydrophilic walls.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 36.11

• The plant expends none its own metabolic energy

to lift xylem sap up to the leaves by bulk flow.

• The absorption of sunlight drives transpiration by

causing water to evaporate from the moist walls of

mesophyll cells and by maintaining a high

humidity in the air spaces within a leaf.

• Thus, the ascent of xylem sap is ultimately solar

powered.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

• A leaf may transpire more than its weight in water

each day. Let’s watch

• To keep the leaf from wilting, flows in xylem vessels may

reach 75 cm/min.

• Guard cells, by

controlling the size

of stomata, help balance

the plant’s need to

conserve water with

its requirements for

photosynthesis.

1. Guard cell mediate the photosynthesis-

transpiration compromise

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 36.12

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 36.13a

• This is NOT on the EOC, but here goes…

• The phloem transports the organic products of photosynthesis

throughout the plant via a process called translocation. Let’s

watch

• In angiosperms, the specialized cells of the phloem that

function in translocation are the sieve-tube members.

• These are arranged end to end to form long sieve tubes with

porous cross-walls between cells along the tube.

• Phloem sap is an aqueous solution in which sugar, primarily the

disaccharide sucrose in most plants, is the most prevalent solute.

• It may also contain minerals, amino acids, and hormones.

Introduction to the Transport of Sugars

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

How would these affect transpiration?

• Heat.

• Wind.

• Light

• Humidity

• Let’s graph with some worksheets.

• In contrast to the unidirectional flow of xylem sap

from roots to leaves, the direction that phloem sap

travels is variable.

• In general, sieve tubes carry food from a sugar

source to a sugar sink.

• A sugar source is a plant organ (especially mature leaves)

in which sugar is being produced by either photosynthesis

or the breakdown of starch.

• A sugar sink is an organ (such as growing roots, shoots,

or fruit) that is a net consumer or storer of sugar.

1. Phloem translocates its sap from sugar

sources to sugar sinks

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

• Phloem sap flows from source to sink at rates as

great as 1 m/hr, faster than can be accounted for by

either diffusion or cytoplasmic streaming.

• Phloem sap moves by bulk flow driven by pressure.

• Higher levels of sugar at the source lowers the water

potential and causes water to flow into the tube.

• Removal of sugar at the sink increases the water potential

and causes water to flow out of the tube.

• The difference in hydrostatic pressure drives phloem sap

from the source to the sink

2. Pressure flow is the mechanism of

translocation in angiosperms

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 36.17

Which of the structures in the diagram below

identifies this cell as a plant cell rather than an

animal cell?

Unlike animal cells, plant cells have a large central

vacuole. How does a vacuole support plant

structures?

A. It fills with liquid, creating pressure that helps to

support the cell.

B. It releases materials into the air that decrease the

weight of the cell.

C. It contains genetic information that controls the

activities of the plant.

D. It forms a rigid substance called cellulose that

supports the plant.

A sedge is a grasslike plant with fibrous roots, which are

small, shallow roots that branch out from the base of the

plant. Which of the following best explains how the structure

of the roots helps the plant? A. The plant gets its support from the roots, which

serve as a kind of anchor.

B. The roots transport water between the stems and

leaves of the plant.

C. The plant uses its roots to capture water that is

close to the surface of the soil.

D. The roots allow for the exchange of gases the

plant needs for photosynthesis.

Plants are composed of different organs, tissues and

cells. Which are found only in vascular plants?

A. Gametes and leaves

B. Xylem and phloem

C. Stomata and guard cells

D. Flowers and spores

The drawing below shows a cross section of a plant leaf. How

does the component marked “x” contribute to the survival of

the plant?

A. It allows the intake of minerals needed for plant growth.

B. It allows the intake of gases needed for photosynthesis.

C. It allows the intake of sunlight needed for ATP production

D. It allows the intake of sugars needed for plant reproduction

Which of these structures is responsible for

transporting water from plant roots to the rest of the

plant?

A. Chloroplast

B. Phloem

C. Stoma

D. Xylem