Transport in plants Flashcards
(43 cards)
what are the three reasons to why plants need transport systems?
- metabolic demands: oxygen and glucose need to be transported for photosynthesis. Mineral ions, hormones and cell waste products need to be transported
- size: effective transport systems need to be built to transport substances all around the plant
- surface area to volume ratio: although leaves have a large sa: v, roots and stems don’t therefore they require gases through transport
what are dicotyledonous plants?
plants that make seeds that contain two cotyledons
what are cotyledons?
organs that are food stores for developing plant embryos and forms the first leaves when the seeds germinate.
what is the vascular bundle(transport system in dicotyledonous plants) made of?
phloem and xylem
Describe herbaceous dicots?
dicots with soft tissues and a relatively short life cycle (leaves and stems that die down at the end of the growing season to soil level)
describe woody (arborescent) dicots
dicots which have hard lignified tissues and a long life cycle.
what is a vascular system?
a series of transport vessels running through the stem, roots and leaves which are in dicotyledonous plants.
Describe the xylem
- transports water and mineral ions
- provides support
- minerals flow from the roots to the shoots and leaves
- most cells in the xylem are dead
- long and hollow
- made of cells fusing together end to end
what other tissue is associated with the xylem in herbaceous dicots?
-thick-walled xylem parenchyma packs around the xylem vessels, storing food and containing tannin deposits
what is tannin?
bitter tasting chemical that protects plant tissues from attack by herbivores
How does spirals of lignin around the lumen of the xylem help the plant?
helps to reinforce the xylem vessels so that they do not collapse under the transpiration pull
how is extra mechanical strength provided in the xylem?
xylem fibres are long cells with lignified secondary walls
Describe vascular bundles in the stem of a dicot
vascular bundles in the stem are around the edge to give strength and support
Describe vascular bundles in the roots of a dicot
in the roots, vascular bundles are in the middle to help the plant withstand the tugging strains that result as the stems and the leaves are blown in the wind.
Describe vascular bundles in the leaf of a dicot
In the leaves, the midrib is the main vein carrying the vascular tissue through the organ. It supports the leaf and many small, branching veins spread through the leaf functioning both in transport and support.
what are the small undignified areas called in a xylem?
bordered pits. This is where water leaves the xylem and moves into other cells
Describe the phloem
a living tissue that transports assimilates and sugars from the leaves where they are made by photosynthesis, needed for respiration. Flow of materials can go up or down.
Describe the structure of the phloem
- composed of sieve tube element cells which connect to form a tube
- long and hollow
- not lignified
- sieve tube cells share a perforated sieve plate which cause organelles to breakdown. Mature phloem cells have no nucleus. Less organelles causes sap to flow
- companion cells
how are the sieve tube element cells in the phloem closely linked with companion cells?
They are linked by plasmodesmata, linking the cytoplasms. The companion cells act as a life support system as the sieve tube cells have lost most normal cell functions
How is the phloem supported?
by supporting tissues including fibres, sclereids and cells with extremely thick cell walls.
Provide evidence that shows water is key for structure and metabolism in plants
- turgor pressure from osmosis provides support to stems and leaves
- evaporation keeps plants cool
- mineral ions are transported in aqueous solutions
- water is needed for photosynthesis
Where is the exchange surface in plants?
root hair cells which have a long, thin extension and a specialised epidermal cell is found near the growing root tip.
What adaptations do root hair cells have for exchange?
- their microscopic size means they can easily penetrate between soil particles
- large surface area to volume ratio
- thin walls
- high concentration of solutes in root hair cells maintains steep water potential gradient
describe the concentration of soil
low concentration on minerals but high water potential.